[Pages S6932-S6995]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ENERGY AND WATER DEVELOPMENT AND RELATED AGENCIES APPROPRIATIONS ACT,
2016
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will
resume consideration of the House message to accompany H.R. 2028, which
the clerk will report.
The senior assistant legislative clerk read as follows:
House Message to accompany H.R. 2028, a bill making
appropriations for energy and water development and related
agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2016, and
for other purposes.
Pending:
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill.
[[Page S6933]]
McConnell motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill, with McConnell
amendment No. 5139, to change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 5140 (to amendment No. 5139), of a
perfecting nature.
McConnell motion to refer the message of the House on the
bill to the Committee on Appropriations, with instructions,
McConnell amendment No. 5141, to change the enactment date.
McConnell amendment No. 5142 (the instructions (amendment
No. 5141) of the motion to refer), of a perfecting nature.
McConnell amendment No. 5143 (to amendment No. 5142), of a
perfecting nature.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The assistant Democratic leader.
Remembering John Glenn
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I wish to join in and echo the comments
of the Democratic leader, Senator Reid, about the passing of John
Glenn. I was just in high school when he was the famous astronaut who
risked his life to prove that we could move forward in the space
program. It wasn't just an achievement that came to science. It was an
achievement America was hungry for.
We were so afraid, after launching the Sputnik and two Russian
cosmonauts, that we were falling behind in the space race. All of the
astronauts, especially John Glenn, risked their lives to move us
forward in the space program that ultimately landed a man on the Moon.
I read this morning in the obituary columns about the risk that was
attendant to this launch after it was scrubbed over and over because of
mechanical problems and weather and the fact that 40 percent of the
time the efforts to use this rocket had failed. Yet John Glenn put his
life on the line in Friendship 7, in that tiny little capsule that was
only 7 feet across and was launched into space. He almost died on the
reentry when the tiles that were to protect him started failing and, as
he termed it, there was a fireball as he came back into Earth.
He made it. He was greeted with a hero's welcome all across the
United States, and he addressed a joint session of Congress. That was
the man I knew.
He was also the man who then volunteered to come to Springfield, IL,
in 1982 and campaign for me when I ran for Congress. I was just
awestruck that this great man, this American hero and then a U.S.
Senator, would take the time to come to my hometown and campaign for
me. He did, and he was beloved. A large crowd gathered, cheering him
on, as they should have. I was just kind of background noise to the
real arrival of the real American hero--John Glenn.
Many years later, when I was elected to the Senate, I was lucky
enough to serve with John Glenn for 2 years and be on his committee. He
was the ranking Democrat, and Fred Thompson was the Republican chairman
of that Administration Committee.
We held some very controversial hearings under Chairman Thompson.
John Glenn would sit there very quietly, and I wondered if he was going
to be outflanked by this trial lawyer, Fred Thompson, who was so gifted
with his own oratory. But time and again, John Glenn rose to the
occasion for our side of the aisle and did it in his own quiet,
persuasive, Midwestern way.
At the end of that 2-year period that I served with him when I first
came to the Senate, he was launched again into space at age 76 or 77.
He was the oldest astronaut and went up into space and came back
safely. He always wanted to fly, whether it was his own beloved
airplane or whether it was a space capsule. He loved flight, and he
made history with his flights around the country and, literally, around
the Earth.
We should remember that he risked his life, too, in airplanes for us.
In World War II, he had some 59 combat missions in the Pacific, earning
the distinguished Flying Cross and many other decorations. But that
wasn't the end of his service. When the Korean war started, he
volunteered again and flew 90 combat missions there. Interesting
footnote: His wingman in those Korean missions, at one point, was Ted
Williams, the famous baseball player for the Boston Red Sox.
His is such a storied career of what John Glenn gave to America,
including restoring our faith in our own space program, risking his
life to prove that we can move forward into space, and serving the
State of Ohio and the Nation as a Senator for four terms. He was just
an extraordinary man.
We can't mention John without mentioning Annie, his wife of 73 years.
They literally shared the same playpen when they were little toddlers.
They grew up together in the same school. They got married at a very
early age. It was a love affair that went on for decades. The two of
them were inseparable.
I am honored to have served with John Glenn. He truly did have the
right stuff, time and again, to make America proud.
(The remarks of Mr. Durbin pertaining to the introduction of S. 3542
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
(The remarks of Mr. Daines pertaining to the introduction of S. 3539
are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced Bills
and Joint Resolutions.'')
WRDA
Mr. DAINES. Madam President, invasive mussels are wreaking havoc on
our ecosystem in Montana. This is negatively impacting our economy,
including our recreation and tourism industries.
Watercraft inspection stations are one of the most effective ways to
stop the spread of these invasive species and to protect neighboring
and distant bodies of water. I am working to ensure that the needed
resources are delivered.
It is time to act now.
Tribute to Jesika Whittle
Madam President, behind every Senator is an extraordinary scheduler.
Since 2012, I have had the privilege of having Jesika Whittle as my
extraordinary scheduler.
As one of the very first staff members I hired, Jesika has literally
been with me from my very first day, and I could not have asked for a
better person for the job or one more willing and prepared to help me
serve the people of Montana.
Jesika played a critical role in setting up our House freshman
office, which is not an easy task, helping me to learn the ropes of
where to go and sometimes where not to go.
Undoubtedly, there were times when it felt like a thankless job, but
I can assure you that the countless meetings scheduled, emails sent at
all hours of the day and night, and gentle reminders to wrap up a
meeting did not go without notice or appreciation.
Her love for and dedication to her family shines through everything
she does. It is this love and dedication that has propelled Jesika and
her husband Zak to return to their native State of Washington. Knowing
the joy this will bring Jesika and her family makes the bitter pill of
losing her easier to swallow, but only slightly.
There isn't a member of my staff who has not benefited somehow from
Jesika, whether it is a reassuring word, a baked good, or sage advice
that perhaps she lifted from Star Wars. Speaking of Star Wars, I would
say that Jesika has the wisdom of Yoda, the work ethic of Luke
Skywalker, and the class of Princess Leia. Because of her, our staff is
more than an odd assortment of public servants. We are a family, and
this Senate family will sorely miss the extraordinary Jesika Whittle.
Jesika, thank you for everything.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Cuba
Mr. LEAHY. Madam President, the election of Donald Trump as our next
President has ignited a rash of speculation about the future of U.S.
policy toward Cuba.
What we know is that the President-elect has said contradictory
things about President Obama's decision to resume diplomatic relations
with Cuba, as he has about some other issues. Among other things, he
has tweeted that he plans to reverse the Obama administration's
regulatory changes relaxing restrictions on U.S. engagement with Cuba
unless the Cuban Government agrees to a ``better deal.''
Despite that, we don't actually know what he will do. I hope, before
making a decision, he listens to advocates on both sides of the issue,
including Cuban-Americans, a growing majority of whom support the
resumption of diplomatic relations. As someone who has
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traveled to Cuba many times and seen firsthand the benefits of the
policy of engagement for both the Cuban people and the American people,
I will do whatever I can to encourage the President-elect to continue
that policy.
The decision to resume diplomatic relations has been enthusiastically
supported here and around the world. One of our closest allies in South
America--their Ambassador talked to my wife Marcelle and me the day our
flag went up for the first time in over 50 years at our Embassy in
Havana.
He said: You know, our country has always strongly supported the
United States. But we are also friends of Cuba, and the relationship
between the United States and Cuba was always like a stone in our shoe.
Today, when your flag went up over your Embassy, the stone came out of
our shoe.
The number of Americans who travel to Cuba has risen dramatically in
the past two years. U.S. airline companies and cruise ships are
carrying passengers there. Hotel deals have been signed.
But the same 5 Members of Congress--3 in the Senate, 2 in the House,
of the 535 Members of the House and the Senate--these 5 Members have
steadfastly opposed the new opening with Cuba. They continually say
that the only Cubans who have benefited from the new opening are Raul
Castro and the Cuban military.
Of course the Cuban Government has benefited. That is unavoidable. It
happens in any country with state-owned enterprises with which we also
have diplomatic and commercial relations. There are many like that. But
it is false and misleading to say that they alone have benefited. In
fact, the Cuban people, particularly Cuban entrepreneurs, have
benefited. So have the American people, and they overwhelmingly want
this opening to continue.
I have met many times with Cuban Government officials. I have also
met with Cuban dissidents who have been persecuted and imprisoned. No
one is a stronger defender of democracy and human rights there than I
am. I raised the issue of dissidents being imprisoned, first face-to-
face with Fidel Castro many years ago, and later with Raul Castro. Like
President Obama, we all want the Cuban people to be able to express
themselves freely and to choose their own leaders in a free and fair
election. But I resent the assertions of those who remain wedded to the
old, failed policy that to favor diplomatic relations is a form of
appeasement to the Castro government.
I am as outraged as anyone when Cubans who peacefully advocate for
human rights and democracy are harassed, threatened, arrested, and
abused, just as I am when such violations of human rights occur in
other countries, including countries by governments whose armed forces
and police annually receive hundreds of millions of dollars in U.S.
aid.
For 55 years we have tried the approach of isolating and pressuring
Cuba that is still advocated by a dwindling, albeit passionate,
minority in Congress. That approach has failed miserably. The Castro
family and their shrinking circle of aging revolutionaries are still in
power. Cuba is still a country where political dissent is not
tolerated.
No one who knows the Castro government expected the resumption of
diplomatic relations to quickly result in an end to oppression of free
elections. Those who label the policy of engagement a failure after
just 2 years because the Castro government continues to persecute its
opponents are either naive or not to be taken seriously. Change in Cuba
will happen incrementally, as it does in most countries. But I have no
doubt that in a lot fewer than 55 years, the Cuban people have a lot
more freedoms than they have had in the past 55 years.
The record is indisputable. Bullying the Cuban Government and making
threats and ultimatums have achieved nothing in more than half a
century. In fact, it isolated the United States and damaged our own
interests.
Consider for a moment what it would mean if we did what these five
Members of Congress advocate. Not only would we have no Embassy in
Cuba, but to be consistent we would have to withdraw our Ambassadors
and impose a unilateral embargo against China, Vietnam, Russia,
Ethiopia, and many other countries where human rights are routinely
violated, where political opponents and journalists and defenders of
human rights are imprisoned and tortured, where there is no such thing
as a fair trial, where civil society organizations are threatened and
harassed, and where dissent is severely punished.
And when we withdraw, others will happily fill the vacuum, as they
have in Cuba, which trades with countries around the world, including
with many of our closest allies. In fact, I recall a meeting I had with
the Ambassadors of at least a dozen European and Asian countries and
with representatives of major companies from those countries. They told
me: We love your embargo. Keep your embargo. Our companies can do
business here and they don't have to compete with American businesses.
Is that what these isolationist Members of Congress want, or are they
just concerned about human rights in Cuba? Would they rather have
Cubans buy rice grown in China or in Louisiana? Would they rather have
Cubans buy milk from New Zealand as they do now or from the United
States? Would they prefer that China and Russia build ports and
airports in Cuba while we lower the flag at our Embassy, pound our
chest, and demand the Cuban Government to relinquish power? That
argument is as illogical as it is inconsistent.
For 55 years, Americans have been free to travel anywhere--Iran,
Russia, Vietnam, any country in the world--but not to Cuba, which is
only 90 miles away. One of my fellow Senators, a Republican Senator,
who has traveled often to Cuba, said: It is one thing if a Communist
country tells me I cannot come to their country, but I don't want my
country telling me I can't go there.
Last year, more than half a million Americans visited Cuba. This
year, the number is even higher. Even from my little State of Vermont,
so many people just drive a few miles to the airport in Canada and fly
down. These Members of Congress want to turn back the clock and make it
a crime for Americans to travel to only one country in the world--Cuba.
If North Korea will let you in, you can go there, but not to Cuba. If
you go to Egypt, which is cracking down on dissent, that is fine, but
not to Cuba. I could go on and on.
Fortunately, more Republicans and Democrats in both the House and
Senate support the right of Americans to travel freely to Cuba, the
right of U.S. farmers to sell their products on credit to Cuban buyers,
and the rights of Cuban private entrepreneurs who are already
benefiting directly from the new opening with the United States. They
will benefit even more when the U.S. embargo--a failed, self-defeating,
vindictive policy if there ever was one--has finally ended.
I have talked with the Cuban owners of these private businesses. They
say they are now able to make far more money than before because as
things have opened up, as more Americans travel there, these businesses
have expanded to meet the growing demand. Those who continue to defend
the embargo should listen to these people. I hope the President-elect
will listen to them.
The purpose of a policy of engagement is to protect and defend the
interests of the United States and the American people and to promote
our values and our products. Diplomatic relations is not a reward to a
foreign government; it is what we do to protect our own interests. Do
the isolationists think our Embassy in Russia is a reward to President
Putin, or that having an Ambassador in Moscow somehow conveys that we
agree with President Putin's corrupt and repressive policies? Does
anyone think that Russia's Embassy here in Washington is somehow a
reward to the United States or to President Obama? Does anyone think
the Cuban Government regards its Ambassador here as a reward to us?
The United States has interests in every country, even if it is just
to stand up for the rights of Americans who travel and study or work
overseas. But there are many other reasons, such as promoting trade and
investment, protecting national security, law enforcement cooperation,
and stopping the spread of contagious diseases. These are all in the
interest of the United States but they are far harder to pursue without
diplomatic relations.
We either believe in the benefits of diplomacy or we don't. We either
empower our diplomats or we don't. Cuba,
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after a year of difficult negotiations, agreed to reopen embassies.
Americans are traveling to Cuba in record numbers, including
representatives of American companies, chambers of commerce, and State
and local government officials. Our two governments have signed new
agreements paving the way for cooperation on a wide range of issues,
from the resumption of regular postal and commercial airline service,
to cooperation on law enforcement and search-and-rescue.
I urge Members of Congress to get briefed on the many ways our
countries are cooperating, to our benefit. It might be an eye-opener.
I understand this is an emotional issue for some Cuban-American
families, including some who are Members of Congress. I have met with a
number of these families. But I have also met with many who have gone
to Cuba even though their property was confiscated by the Cuban
government, even though they thought they would never go back, but now
they can go and visit old friends, and they have changed their views.
In fact, after 55 years, survey after survey, poll after poll shows
that most Cuban-Americans support the new policy of engagement. They
want the United States to have an embassy in Havana. They are not
saying they agree with the Cuban government, but they are saying they
want the United States to have an embassy in Havana.
There is a time for family politics, and there is a time for what is
in the best interest of the Nation as a whole, all 50 States.
Diplomatic relations serve the national interest.
I urge these Members of Congress to put what is in the interest of
the American people above their personal interest. Listen to the
overwhelming majority of the Cuban and American people. They want the
policy of engagement to continue because they believe it is the best
hope for a free and prosperous Cuba.
Marcelle and I had a delightful time in Vermont a few months ago when
we went and cheered on a group of Little Leaguers from all over our
State. They were going to Cuba to play with Little Leaguers in Cuba.
Marcelle and I gave them an American flag that had been flown over the
U.S. Capitol. Those kids were grinning from ear to ear while holding
it, and they sent me pictures of them flying the American flag on the
baseball fields in Cuba where they were playing ball and being
photographed, the Cuban teams with their flag and the Vermont team with
ours. Only a few years ago that would not have happened--the U.S. flag
flying in Cuba with the Cuban people cheering.
One of the photographs I remember the most from that trip was taken
by a member of my office, Lisa Brighenti. The picture was from the
back, and one team wore red T-shirts and the other wore blue. There
they were--so much like you see with Little Leaguers--walking off the
field, their arms around each other's shoulders, and they just played a
game together. You don't have to see their faces or which T-shirt says
``United States'' and which one says ``Cuba.'' You know it is one of
each, and they are together because of their shared love of the game.
I think of the times during the worst part of the Cold War, and I
have gone to countries behind what we then called the Iron Curtain. I
would be talking to Foreign Ministers, Defense Ministers, people in key
positions, and they would say ``My niece went to Stanford'' or ``My son
is studying at the University of Kentucky,'' and some would tell me
about my own alma mater, Georgetown.
These were openings that everybody from our diplomatic corps to our
intelligence community would tell me were very important because they
would learn about us, and, just as importantly, we would learn about
them.
So I urge President-Elect Trump to carefully weigh the pros and cons
of this issue. I believe that if he follows his instincts, if he
listens to Cuban private entrepreneurs, he, too, will conclude that it
makes no sense to return to a failed policy of isolation. That policy
has been used by the Castros as an excuse to justify their grip on
power and their failed economic policies, it has divided the Cuban and
American people, and no other country in this hemisphere supports it.
As that Ambassador said to Marcelle and me: When your flag went up,
the stone came out of our shoe.
The Cuban and American people share much in common--our history, our
cultures, our families, our ideals, our hopes for the future. We are
neighbors. Our economies are increasingly intertwined. We should no
longer be isolated from one another.
As the Castro era ends, our policy today is focused on the next
generation of Cuban entrepreneurs, activists, students, and leaders.
They are Cuba's future. We should endeavor to engage with them in every
way we can. I met with some of them, as did a bipartisan group of House
and Senate Members, earlier this week. They are bright, motivated young
people. They are starting their own businesses. What a refreshing
attitude they have toward life. Will everything change overnight? No.
But Cuba is changing.
I want to yield the floor, but before I do, I will say that I will
speak on this many more times. I think our relationship with Cuba is
important not only for the United States but for the whole hemisphere.
The stone has come out of the shoe; let's not put it back in. Let's
work to help the Cuban people--not the Cuban Government but the Cuban
people. By helping the Cuban people, we help ourselves.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
Ukraine
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Madam President, I have several topics to talk about
today, but I will start with a very important letter that was sent to
President-Elect Trump by members and friends of the Senate Ukraine
Caucus. We had 27 Senators, including me, come together to advocate and
make clear that we wanted to continue the strong United States-
Ukrainian relationship that our two countries have enjoyed for many
years and to convey our support for Ukraine and ask the President-elect
and the new administration to support our ally Ukraine and help it
secure a peaceful and democratic future.
Almost 3 years after Russia's illegal annexation of Crimea and
military aggression in eastern Ukraine, daily cease-fires along the
line of contact make a mockery of the Minsk agreement and demonstrate
that this conflict in the heart of Europe is far from over. Russia has
yet to withdraw its heavy weapons. It continues to engage in sabotage.
It has not halted its disinformation war against Ukraine and the West
nor stopped the economic and political pressure aimed at undermining
the Ukrainian Government.
I was in Ukraine last year, and I saw firsthand the struggles that
their government is having. They have their own internal issues with
corruption and the like, but they are trying to make for a better
country, and that is very difficult when you have an outside nation
that is engaged in the kind of combat that we see from Russia and these
kinds of interventions. According to conservative estimates from the
United Nations, approximately 10,000 people have been killed, over
20,000 wounded, and more than 2 million internally displaced since the
conflict began.
We said in our letter--27 Senators, Republicans and Democrats, led by
Senators Durbin and Portman--that Russia has launched a military
landgrab in Ukraine that is unprecedented in modern European history,
and we asked the President-elect to work with us on this very important
matter so that we may help the Ukrainian people secure their democracy.
My State has a very strong tradition of Ukrainians. I actually live
only a few miles from the Ukrainian center in our State. We have a long
tradition of opening our arms to people from every corner of the globe.
The people in my own city and State are concerned about the situation
in Ukraine. There are a lot of people worried about what is going on,
especially with the new administration coming in, so I think a strong
statement, followed, of course, by actions from the President-elect
would be very helpful.
I have to mention one Ukrainian place that I adore, Kramarczuk, which
is in my neighborhood. I actually held my first election celebration
there when I was running for county attorney. Of course, it didn't end
because we had to go into the next morning. The vote was a little
close. We didn't know
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the result until maybe noon, but that evening we were at Kramarczuk.
They have a mural that is literally almost the size of the entire
backdrop from door to door in the U.S. Senate, and it is a mural they
have proudly hung of the Statue of Liberty. That mural is there because
the Kramarczuk family has always believed in a country that brought
them in as immigrants and refugees.
I am proud to represent that community and join the other 26 Senators
in asking the President-elect to continue to support Ukrainians here at
home but, most importantly, the sovereignty of the country of Ukraine
and their democratic values.
CURES Bill
Next, I will turn to another issue that is of key importance to this
body, and that is the passage of the CURES Act, which I know the
President is going to sign into law. We are very excited about that
bill. There are several things in that bill that the Presiding Officer
and I have both worked on. The bill includes opioid funding. Both of
our States, West Virginia and Minnesota, have seen way too many deaths
and lives lost early, way too many people experiencing an overdose
without the help they need for treatment.
The bill authorizes $1 billion, $500 million a year, to help the many
families struggling with prescription drug addiction. Senators
Whitehouse, Portman, Ayotte, and I actually authored the original bill,
the CARA bill, which set the national framework for dealing with opioid
addiction. It didn't just include authorizing money for treatment; it
also included some foundation steps for doing a better job of
exchanging information among physicians in terms of who is getting
opioids. I remember one guy I met--a rehab guy up in Moorhead, MN--who
had a patient that had gotten opioid prescriptions from 85 different
doctors and medical providers in Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota,
and Wisconsin. As a State with many States on its borders, we see this
going on all the time.
I have built on that with a bill I introduced for a national
prescription drug monitoring program that I think is very important.
Senator Cornyn and I did the original bill on a drug take-back program
to make it easier to get drugs out of medicine cabinets. The CARA bill
actually built on that, but what was missing from the CARA bill,
because it was an authorization bill, was the funding. This effort at
the end contained in the CURES Act is going to be very important in the
form of grants to our States to get the money out there.
Second is the research money. Nearly $5 billion will go to NIH to
help them look for a cure for horrific diseases like cancer and
Alzheimer's. That money will be critical. We are doing groundbreaking
work in Minnesota at the Mayo Clinic and also at the University of
Minnesota, which will be key to finding a cure to these diseases.
The third thing in the bill that maybe hasn't gotten as much
attention is the Anna Westin Act. The Presiding Officer and I worked on
that bill together along with Senator Ayotte and Senator Baldwin--four
women leading the bill, and we got it done. That bill has been kicking
around for over a decade. It is a bill that actually came out of Anna
Westin's untimely death. She was a young girl who struggled with an
eating disorder and eventually died due to the circumstances related to
her eating disorder. Her mother, Kitty Westin, has carried her torch.
She first gave it to Paul Wellstone, her Senator. Paul died way too
young in that tragic plane crash, and then it was passed on to Senator
Harkin of Iowa. I was on the bill with him, and when Senator Harkin
left, I took the bill over and was able to reach across the aisle and
get the support of the Presiding Officer, Senator Capito, as well as
Senator Ayotte and then Senator Baldwin. This bill builds on the
Wellstone-Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act to
clarify that insurance companies must cover residential treatment for
eating disorders the same way they cover treatment for other mental and
physical illnesses.
Over 30 million Americans struggle with eating disorders, including
over 200,000 people in my State. It is actually the leading cause of
death from mental illness. People don't realize that, but obviously
anorexia is a very dangerous disease, as are other eating disorders.
That one bill has a lot, but we know there is more work to do on
prescription drugs.
I see Senator Grassley here. He and I have worked very hard on what
is called the pay-for-delay bill, which would tell the big
pharmaceutical companies that they cannot pay the generic companies to
keep their products off the market. That literally eliminates
competition, and, from the estimates we have gotten, it would save
billions of dollars over years. We think that is a really, really,
really important bill and something we would like to get done.
I have worked with Senator McCain on legislation that focuses on
bringing in less expensive drugs from Canada, as well as a bill I have
to allow for negotiations of prices under Medicare Part D.
Tributes to Departing Senators
Madam President, I will close my remarks by turning to some of our
retiring Senators and speaking briefly on each one of them.
Harry Reid
We had a beautiful portrait unveiling for Leader Reid yesterday. He
has been a leader who takes all ideas into consideration, even those of
newer Members.
In January of 2007, I began working on ethics reform, and, in fact, I
asked him if that would be an important priority when he took over as
leader. It was S. 1, and one of the first bills we passed.
Senator Reid didn't give new Members the opportunity to lead just on
big bills. When a little girl in Minnesota named Abbey Taylor was
maimed while swimming in a pool with a defective drain, Leader Reid
stood by my side and helped me work with Republicans to get a bill
passed in honor of Abbey's memory and final wish.
I met this little girl in the hospital. She went on to live for a
year. She had been swimming in a kiddie pool when her intestines were
pulled out by a defective drain due to the way it was installed.
Her parents never gave up. Scott Taylor, her dad, called me every
single week to see what was happening with the bill. Honestly, again,
the bill was moving around and hadn't had any action for years. Ted
Stevens, who at the time was a Senator from Alaska, helped me. In the
end, it was Senator Reid, working with others, including Senator Lott,
and we were able to get that bill on another bill, and we were able to
pass it.
To this day my proudest moment in the U.S. Senate was calling Scott
Taylor and telling him that bill had passed, and then last year hearing
from the head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission in the Commerce
Committee that not one child has died because of a defective drain
since that bill passed. That bill, by the way, was named after James
Baker's granddaughter, who had also perished in a pool incident. That
is an example. I don't think it would have happened if Harry Reid
hadn't been one of our leaders.
Another example is when we were trying to build a bridge to
Wisconsin, Senator Johnson and I were working on that issue along with
House Representative Bachmann, Representative Duffy, and Senator
Franken, and we had to get everyone signed off on an exemption to the
Scenic Rivers Act. It was a Saturday, and no one was left in the Senate
except two or three Members, and I had one Member I couldn't reach who
had gotten on a plane, but we thought we could still reach him so I
could get the last signoff to get the bill done. Harry Reid had just
found out his wife had breast cancer and was waiting at home, but he
wouldn't go home. He insisted on presiding for me. The leader of the
Senate sat in the Presiding Officer's chair so I could be back in the
Republican cloakroom trying to reach the Senator. That happened.
We didn't get the bill done that day, but the minute we got back in
January, Senator Reid worked with Senator McConnell, and we were able
to get that on the agenda and get that exemption. That bridge is going
up as we speak. It is a massive bridge that had to be built because the
other bridge was so bad it closed down all the time. People would
literally cross their fingers when they went over it. That is Senator
Reid.
A lot has happened since he first came to work in Congress as a
police
[[Page S6937]]
officer in the halls of the Capitol. But one thing has stayed the same
about Leader Reid--the true spirit of him. It is the considerate leader
who will sit up at the presiding desk just to help a freshman pass a
bill that is important to her and her constituents. It is the kind of
person who takes the time to talk to a little boy with leukemia and
show him his favorite pictures right in the middle of the budget
debate. That happened to me with a kid I brought in his office from
Minnesota. It is the humble Senator who never forgets that he came from
Searchlight, NV, and always serves with his home in mind.
Thank you, Senator Reid, for your service. You will be missed.
Barbara Mikulski
So there are two other Senators who are retiring this week, and one
of them is Senator Barbara Mikulski. She has been, as the Presiding
Officer knows, the dean of the women in the Senate for a very, very
long time. She is the queen of one-liners, and one of my favorite ones
is one she uses when she talks about women elected officials. She
always says: We see things not just at the macro level but at the
macaroni-and-cheese level.
After a few years when I had been in the Senate, she called us into
the President's Room--a number of the women Senators--to gear up for a
debate that mattered to the women of this country. She, literally--
being short, as she is--stood on the couch in that room and said: Gear
up. Square your shoulders. Put your lipstick on. Get ready for the
revolution.
Now, at the time, I was not even sure what the revolution was. I was
thinking all the time that she had probably used that line for maybe
much weightier things. But that is her life. She is an advocate. She is
a leader. She is someone who has championed the women of the Senate and
all women in elected office. She is the one who was here first, of her
own making. She is not someone who took over a seat after a husband or
father had died. She ran, and she ran on her own merit, and she leaves
on her own merit. She leaves on the merit of passing incredibly
important bills for Maryland, incredibly important legislation for this
country. I will miss her as a mentor, and we will always miss her
dearly.
Barbara Boxer
Finally, there is Senator Barbara Boxer, who joined the Senate in
1993. When I got to the Senate, I was on the Environment Committee. She
was the new chair. I got to see firsthand her advocacy--her advocacy on
climate change, her advocacy on transportation and waterway
infrastructure--and the way she would just never give up when she
decided something was right for her State and right for the country.
But the one thing is that everyone talks about Barbara Boxer's fiery
advocacy and her incredible humor and tenacity. Sometimes, I think
people forget how productive she has been when she worked across the
aisle. I saw firsthand how she was able to work with Senator Inhofe on
the transportation bill and then later with Senator McConnell on the
last transportation bill.
She is someone who has credibility on our side of the aisle. When she
says she is willing to make a compromise with the Republicans, people
listen. She never gave up. She would have dinners at Italian
restaurants. She would find ways, in kind of a mom's way, to get
everyone together. She passed some really incredible legislation,
including water infrastructure legislation with Senator Vitter over the
last few years.
That is what she has done. I can't think of anyone whom we are going
to miss more in terms of that presence and that kind of hardscrabble
advocacy, which is always coupled with the pragmatic way of getting
important bills done. So we are going to miss Senator Reid, Senator
Mikulski, and, also, Senator Boxer.
Kelly Ayotte
I would also like to add that, of the Republican Senators who are
leaving, I have enjoyed a very strong working relationship with Senator
Ayotte. She and I have worked together on opioids. We have worked
together a lot on the issue of the eating disorder bill. I am glad that
in her final weeks in the Senate, we have been able to pass that
important legislation that embraced so many of her priorities.
Dan Coats
I also worked at length with Senator Coats. We both serve on the
Joint Economic Committee. He has shown great leadership there, and
also, again, an ability to work across the aisle. He believes strongly
in civility and in getting to know your fellow Senators. We are going
to miss him dearly for his pleasant way and his ability to cross over
the aisle and work together. I also want to thank him for the work he
did on an adoption bill that we worked on together.
There are many other Senators whom we wish well to. There is Senator
Kirk and the work he has done on the Great Lakes priorities. We have
worked on that together, as well as all of his leadership in the area
of international relations.
Madam President, I see that the Senator from Iowa, Mr. Grassley, is
here.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Iowa.
Executive Actions
Mr. GRASSLEY. Madam President, for the last 8 years, we have seen
President Obama's administration take action after action and do it
without regard for concerns expressed by the American people or their
elected representatives in Congress, which amount to a great deal of
unconstitutional or at least contrary-to-statute Executive overreach.
The Obama administration used Executive fiat to push sweeping
regulations with little thought about damage to American jobs. The
Obama administration has repeatedly stretched its authority beyond
limits set by Congress in law. It has twisted the same laws and even
the Constitution itself to justify this Executive overreach. Despite
early promises of transparency, it has kept the American people and the
Congress in the dark about many of its most significant decisions.
Americans are right, then, to be frustrated with what they see as
more unnecessary burdens and unchecked abuses being handed down by an
out-of-reach bureaucracy. In November, they made their voices heard. So
now we are going to have a new President on January 20. President-Elect
Trump has said that he intends to roll back the mess of harmful
regulations and Executive power grabs of the last 8 years.
He is certainly going to have his hands full, as we all know. But
there is plenty that we can do to begin the process on January 20.
President Obama's tenure has brought about an unprecedented expansion
of the regulatory state. By some estimates, bureaucratic redtape now
places a $2 trillion burden on the Nation's economy. You know who pays
for that? The American people do.
I don't doubt that there are some good intentions behind every new
rule. But the notion that so-called experts in Washington, DC, need to
regulate every aspect of our lives does not make much sense to many of
the Iowans I talk to. They are hoping that a President Trump will bring
common sense to Washington, DC.
Take, for example, the Environmental Protection Agency's waters of
the United States rule. It is often referred to by acronym WOTUS. This
rule seeks to expand what the government can regulate under the Clean
Water Act. Congress intentionally limited EPA's reach under the law to
what is termed navigable waterways. But the WOTUS rule would subject 97
percent of the land in my State of Iowa to EPA bureaucratic burdens.
I assume it does the same in several other States. But I have only
checked on Iowa. So 97 percent of the land to be regulated by the EPA
bureaucracy is just an impossible situation. Think about that. Every
homeowner, every contractor, and every farmer would need to seek a
Federal permit for projects requiring the simple task of moving dirt,
even if it is nowhere near an actual body of water. That, of course,
means more paperwork, more time wasted, and, of course, more money
spent to get Federal permits for activities that this Congress never
intended the Federal Government to regulate.
A bipartisan majority of both Houses of Congress has voiced its
disapproval of the WOTUS rule, and a Federal appeals court has placed a
nationwide stay on its implementation. Yet I continue to hear concerns,
regardless of the court case, that some in the EPA
[[Page S6938]]
are going to move forward with the rule's implementation, causing
unnecessary fear and confusion among farmers and landowners.
So on day one, President Trump should direct his administration to
stop defending the WOTUS rule in the Federal courts where it is now
held up. He should also direct his EPA to immediately stop implementing
or enforcing the rule while the Agency begins the rulemaking process to
take it off the books once and for all. It is not just official
regulations that have sparked concern over the last 8 years, the Obama
administration has also used Executive actions, agency guidance
documents, and legal interpretations to push its agenda, leaving
Congress and the American people in the dark.
Often this has been done with disturbing results. In 2014, the Obama
administration acted unilaterally to release five senior-level Taliban
commanders who were being held at Guantanamo Bay in exchange for SGT
Bowe Bergdahl. Now, that is contrary to law.
Despite the requirements of law, the administration never notified
Congress, as the law requires, prior to this prisoner's transfer. The
law required the administration to provide Congress with a detailed
statement of the basis for the release, an explanation for why it is in
our national security interests, and a plan to prevent the prisoners
from returning to the battlefield.
Instead, Congress heard only crickets. The administration provided no
notice to the Congress, no legal justification for the release, and no
plan to prevent these Taliban commanders from reentering a fight that
has already spilled so much blood of America's sons and daughters.
One reporter said the Taliban has been more transparent about this
exchange than the Obama administration. Even the nonpartisan Government
Accountability Office later concluded that the administration acted
illegally. Well, it is pretty clear. The law says that you have to give
Congress 30 days' notice. They didn't give any notice.
There were and still are, then, serious questions about whether
releasing these detainees from Guantanamo was a good idea, even to the
extent to which the law was violated. So I asked this administration to
disclose the legal advice that the Department of Justice apparently
provided that justified its failure to notify Congress in a timely
way--in other words, a justification for ignoring the law.
But the Department of Justice refused to do that. The public deserves
a full and transparent accounting of why the administration believed it
could disregard the law. On day one, then, President Trump should order
the Justice Department to produce any legal advice that it concocted to
excuse the Obama administration from its obligation to notify Congress
of this decision 30 days before the release, because that is what the
law says.
Unfortunately, this isn't the only legal opinion the Obama
administration has used to avoid scrutiny of its actions. The Justice
Department also brewed up a ludicrous legal opinion to block government
watchdogs from accessing Federal records needed in the course of
congressional oversight. If this year has taught us anything, it is
that the government needs more oversight, not less.
It is unbelievable that a handful of unelected bureaucrats would try
to defy the Congress and the people it represents by ignoring that law.
Unfortunately, it hasn't stopped with the case I just cited.
The Obama administration practically treats a congressional subpoena
as if it were a freedom of information request rather than a
constitutionally mandated inquiry from a coequal branch of government.
This very issue is now being debated in the courts.
But it is not just Congress that can't get information; the press and
private citizens have had their freedom of information requests
regularly met with very long delays, if they get any response at all.
You know it is bad when the New York Times calls this White House the
most secretive in more than two decades.
President Trump should take steps to reverse this trend of more
secrecy in government because more transparency in government will
bring more accountability. On day one, he should direct his agency
heads to cooperate with congressional inquiries, inspector general
investigations, and FOIA requests, and he should empower government
whistleblowers.
Whistleblowers expose facts about wrongdoing and incompetence inside
the vast Federal bureaucracy, often at risk of their own career and
their own reputations and, in some cases, I found out, even their
health.
Without whistleblowers, Americans would be none the wiser that, for
instance, the Justice Department walked guns that put law enforcement
agents in jeopardy--that is the Fast and Furious investigation I did--
or that the EB-5 investor visa program is riddled with fraud, or that
agencies spend tens of millions of taxpayer dollars every year to pay
employees under investigation for misconduct who simply sit at home on
paid leave. Information provided by whistleblowers under the Securities
and Exchange Commission Whistleblower Program has brought in more than
$584 million in financial sanctions. The Internal Revenue Service has
collected more than $3 billion in tax revenues since 2007 thanks to
whistleblowers under a piece of legislation I got passed in 2006, I
believe it was.
Since I pushed to empower and protect whistleblowers under the False
Claims Act way back in 1986, the Federal Government has recovered more
than $48 billion in taxpayers' money lost to fraud. That simple,
quantifiable information is a good deal. But these brave employees
often face retaliation from their own ranks. So I am going to suggest
that if President Trump is going to be very serious about fixing the
Federal bureaucracy, he should empower these patriotic citizens to help
us identify fraud, abuse, and misconduct so that we can get this
government working again.
I will propose to the President-elect, when I get a chance to talk to
him, something I have proposed to every President since Reagan. And no
President, of course, has done this, and maybe it is ridiculous for me
to think President Trump will do it, but he is coming to Washington to
shake things up. I will suggest to him, to empower whistleblowers, who
know there is fraud and who are patriotic people who want fraud
corrected, that he hold a Rose Garden ceremony honoring whistleblowers,
and maybe do it once a year so that they know that the tone from the
top--that the new Commander in Chief has the backs of these patriotic
soldiers for good government whom we call whistleblowers.
Of course, what I have gone through in these remarks as I finish is
far from an exhaustive list, but the common thread in all of this is
that the Obama administration frequently failed to take care that the
laws be faithfully executed as required by our Constitution. When that
doesn't happen and Congress lets a President get away with it, then we
are not upholding our oath to the Constitution, which basically says
that Congress passes the law and they ought to be a check on the
executive branch to see that the laws are faithfully executed. The
person coming to town to drain the swamp--a person by the name of
Trump--should prioritize these failures and begin to restore the
executive branch to its proper place in government consistent with the
checks and balances outlined in our Constitution. These actions will
help the new President make good on his pledge to fix the Federal
bureaucracy and do what he said last night on television in Des Moines,
IA--put Americans first.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from North Dakota.
Ms. HEITKAMP. Madam President, before I begin my remarks on why I
came down to the floor today, I would like to join with my colleague
from Iowa in saying it is a very good idea to have a Rose Garden
ceremony talking about whistleblowers, supporting people who want to do
the right thing in the bureaucracy, and I am willing to work with him
in any way that is appropriate to talk about what we need to do to make
sure that whistleblowers in our bureaucracy have the protection and the
appreciation. There are many great people in government who see things
every day. We spend a lot of time in our Subcommittee on Homeland
Security talking about what we can do to get those good ideas from the
bureaucracy, those good ideas from
[[Page S6939]]
folks who actually work in the government percolated up to the Congress
and implemented. So I applaud the work he has done on whistleblowers.
Senator Grassley, I look forward to having another conversation about
what we can do to put America first by making sure our public employees
have an opportunity to feel pride in what they do every day, knowing
that they are working for a cause in the most efficient, effective
manner for the American people. I applaud your work.
Coal Miners' Health Care and Pensions and the Ex-Im Bank
Madam President, I want to talk a little bit about this past
election. There has been a lot of Monday night quarterbacking about
what happened. I guess you can't say that anymore now that they play
football on Monday nights, but there has been a lot of backseat driving
over what happened.
For this Senator, the message of this election could not be clearer
that people who go to work every day--particularly those people who
shower when they come home at night or come home in the morning if they
are working shift--feel like we left them behind. They feel like things
happened to them that are unexplainable to them even though they are
working as hard as they can. They think that the government and the
people in Washington, DC, aren't working for them and they are getting
left behind.
Now there is an important opportunity to work in a bipartisan way to
learn the lessons of this past election and to stand up and fight for
American workers, to listen to American workers and hear about the
challenges they have and to respond to those challenges, especially
when those challenges clearly represent injustice. Every person in
America being told these stories would say that shouldn't happen. There
is no clearer indication of a ``that shouldn't happen'' story today
than in the dialogue and debate in Washington, DC, and what is
happening to the coal miners in this country.
Last night, I stood with 20 to 30 coal miners from the Presiding
Officer's State. These are good people who work hard--and I know the
Presiding Officer has been fighting for them as well--who simply want
what they have earned. They simply want the opportunity to take care of
their families and the people in their communities. You know, it was
pretty cold out when we were standing out there. A number of the
reporters were giving me a hard time because, being from North Dakota,
everybody assumes it is always 20 below zero there, even in July, and I
had some choice words. I said: You know, we were only out there for
about 20 minutes in the cold, but if we leave here without a clear
message, without an opportunity for those miners to know not only that
we care but know that we are making their concerns a top priority, then
they will be left out in the cold for a lot longer than 20 minutes by
this Congress.
I made the point that there is a coal miner on the flag in West
Virginia but there is also a farmer on the flag in West Virginia. That
farmer, for me, represents the people who I know built the country in
my State. We don't have coal miners who went underground, but we have a
lot of coal miners who helped build our region. This is a moment where
we can say to people who go to work every day, people who believe and
built this country, whose ancestors built this country, that they are
going to get what they earned--not what they deserve but what they
earned.
When you look at many of the miners in these communities, there isn't
a lot of economic opportunity and there aren't a lot of other jobs
available. They risked their health, but they took that risk knowing
they were going to get something in return: financial stability for
their families. Suddenly, they are told that all they bargained for and
all they agreed to is gone. There is something wrong with that. There
is something wrong when we don't learn the lessons of the last
election.
The other reason I react personally to this is I see the string that
goes back to what is happening with Central States Pension Fund in my
State. My good friend from Minnesota has joined with me in many of the
efforts that we had on Central States to hear the stories of people who
worked hard at a time when people were lifting packages and delivering
goods with much heavier weight requirements than we have today. They
talk about the surgeries they had, the hip replacements and knee
replacements, and they talk about why they did it--to put food on the
table for their families. Will all of that go away because of an
irresponsible financial sector that destroyed this economy and made it
virtually impossible for these pension funds to cash flow?
I think it is time that we stand up for these workers. I think it is
time that we take the right fight.
I came to the floor and listened as Presiding Officer when we were in
the majority, and I wish I had a dollar for every time someone talked
about the American people and the American worker and what they were
going to do for them. We now have an opportunity to do a lot. We have
an opportunity not only to give the people who earned financial
security the financial security they earned, but we have an opportunity
to make sure we have good American jobs.
There is another provision that got left behind despite a lot of
people who support it, and that is the ``Buy American'' provision,
which is in the WRDA bill. The ``Buy American'' provision has broad-
based support throughout this country, but yet when we get into the
Halls of Congress, we cannot negotiate and get it done.
Finally, I wish to talk about something on the floor that I have
spent a lot of time talking about; that is, the Ex-Im Bank. We started
basically shutting down the Ex-Im to any new credit by not
reauthorizing it. Guess what. We got it reauthorized by huge
majorities, a huge majority in the Senate and over 70 percent in the
House.
Victory, right? Well, guess what. We cannot make any deal over $10
million at the Ex-Im Bank unless we have a quorum. We have
singlehandedly seen this body hold up the quorum at the Ex-Im Bank.
People want to say this is simply about: Well, why do you want to bail
out or help out GE? Why do you stand for Caterpillar? Why do you stand
for Westinghouse? Why do you stand for Boeing? Those are the big
benefactors.
That is an argument that so misunderstands what happens in America.
To give you an example, Boeing has 16 suppliers just in North Dakota.
Boeing, with the ability to sell airplanes across the country and
across the world, means we get good jobs in North Dakota, good jobs we
will lose out on.
I have said it once, I have said it many times. I don't stand here
and cry for the CEOs of GE or Boeing. That is not whom I am standing
for. I am standing here begging this body to basically get the Ex-Im
Bank approved once again. I will tell you why--because $20 billion or
$30 billion of deals are waiting for us to get a quorum. What does that
mean? That $20 billion supports over 116,000 jobs in America. If those
CEOs are forced, by a lack of export credit assistance, if they are
forced to take those jobs overseas--which they already have, thousands
have already left this country--that means workers in this country
don't get those jobs. Once again, people say: Well, what kind of
government subsidy is this?
In the face of the reality that the Ex-Im Bank actually returns
dollars to the Treasury of this country, we are going to shut down the
Ex-Im Bank and continue to keep it hobbled to the point where it cannot
do its job, it cannot allow our manufacturing interests to be
competitive.
As we leave this Congress and we open up the opportunity for further
dialogue, I hope all the rhetoric we have heard over and over again
about American jobs, American workers, and about American opportunity--
I hope we live up to that rhetoric. I hope we take the steps we need to
take to guarantee that American workers come first whenever we set our
policies. There is no better place to address these pension concerns,
there is no better place than the ``Buy American'' provisions, and
there certainly is no easier way to get an immediate result than to get
the Ex-Im Bank up and running. It is a tragedy that we are so unwilling
to do this, not because it doesn't make huge common sense but because
it doesn't fit in with an ideological position that was taken by the
hard right against the vast majority of American interests and
certainly the majority of people in this body.
[[Page S6940]]
With that, I turn to my colleague from the great State of Minnesota
for her comments.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Madam President, I stand here today with two
incredibly strong women, Senator Heitkamp of North Dakota and Senator
Shaheen of New Hampshire--and of course the Presiding Officer as well
from the great State of West Virginia. I think we all approach our jobs
with a certain pragmatism about what matters. It is not about what is
left or what is right, it is about what is right for the people of this
country. The two issues the Senator from North Dakota has raised are
both incredibly important for these workers. When people have felt
nickel-and-dimed and pushed down by the system, they can't always put a
bill number on what that means. They can always put a number on how
things have changed and why they feel like, hey, my cable bill is
eating me up or, hey, I can't get a mortgage or I can't send my kid to
college, but we know that is happening now. We in this Chamber know
what is going on.
The two things the Senator from North Dakota mentioned are both
things we could do for the people of America. The first is to stand
with the coal miners of West Virginia, promises made should be promises
kept. It was Barbara Jordan of Texas, who once said: What the American
people want is something quite simple--they want a country as good as
its promise. These coal miners were promised things. Over 70 years ago,
President Harry Truman brokered an agreement that provided health and
pension benefits for coal miners in the United Mine Workers of America
Health and Retirement Funds. The Coal Act and its 2006 amendments
showed the continuing commitment to the health and retirement security
of our Nation's miners and their families. Yet, in October,
approximately 12,500 retired coal miners and widows received notices
telling them their health care benefits would be cut off at the end of
this year--retired miners and widows. Then, in November, another 3,600
notices went out. That is over 16,000 people who will lose their health
care coverage. I know negotiations are going on as we speak, but we
urge our colleagues and the leadership in the Senate to do all they can
for these miners, many of whom are in the State of the Presiding
Officer.
As Senator Heitkamp mentioned, we have a similar situation with the
Central States Pension Plan, 14,000 Minnesotans. I just met with 300 of
them this weekend. The plan that was originally proposed was actually
rejected by the Treasury Department because it was so unfair to these
workers. They are continuing to look for a solution.
Lastly, I say about the coal miners, in Minnesota, we have iron ore
miners. So while your miners might be covered in black soot, ours are
covered in red iron ore.
My grandpa worked most of his life underground in the mines in Ely,
MN. He had to quit school when he was in sixth grade because his
parents were sick and he was the oldest boy of nine kids. He went to
work pulling a wagon. When he was old enough as a teenager, he went to
work in those iron ore mines. In sixth grade he quit school. He had
dreamed of a career in the Navy. Instead, every single day he went down
in a cage 1,500 feet underground with a little black lunch pail that my
grandma packed for him every single day. His youngest sister had to go
to an orphanage, and he promised we would go and get her. In a year and
a half after he got the job and married my grandma, he went back, got
his little sister Hannah, brought her back and raised her. That is our
family story. It is a mining story.
I always think about what he thought when he went down in that cage
every day--that career in the Navy, or out in the woods where he loved
to hunt. Instead, he did that job. He did that job for his family, his
two kids, and then the rest of his brothers and sisters because he knew
if he worked hard, he would be able to support them because there would
be a pension, because there would be health care, because he wouldn't
die--like his own father--leaving behind kids, with the oldest one
being 21 years old. That didn't happen. My grandpa raised two boys. One
became an engineer. And my dad, the other boy, went to a 2-year college
that was paid for at the time, went on to get a journalism degree, and
became a reporter who interviewed everyone from Mike Ditka to Ronald
Reagan, to Ginger Rogers. That is America, and these coal miners
deserve that same support.
Another part of our State which believes if you work hard every day
you should be able to get where you want to go are those who work in
manufacturing, those who work in the rural parts of our State. I don't
think they would ever put together the Ex-Im Bank--that Senator
Heitkamp has gathered us to talk about today--with their own
livelihoods. That is a very complex matter about a guy getting
confirmed on the Bank, but, in fact, it is true. Because while we have
saved the Ex-Im Bank, which finances so many hundreds of small
businesses in Minnesota that wouldn't be able to deal with going to a
big major bank, we still haven't confirmed someone for that Board.
Getting that person confirmed for that Board and through the Senate
would mean the Ex-Im Bank could go back to its functional levels of
financing major transactions.
That is why we are here, to ask the Senate to support the nomination
of J. Mark McWatters to serve as a member of the Board of Directors. I
join my colleagues to do that.
On January 11, the Senate Banking Committee received the nomination
of McWatters to fill the Republican vacancy on the Board. This is a
Republican candidate we are asking the Senate to confirm, but it is 333
days and counting since he has been nominated.
In 2015, I remember bringing together a group of small businesses
from all over the country to talk about the importance of the Ex-Im
Bank, to hear their stories of how they are going to go under if they
are not allowed to continue their financing. Mostly, at a time when we
are dealing with the winds of global competition being blown at us
every single day, to be at such a disadvantage to other developed
nations that have Ex-Im-type banks, that have financing authority--and
it is not just China that is going to eat our lunch unless we can help
businesses get over $10 million in financing. They must be laughing at
us over there. There are about 85 credit export agencies in over 60
other countries, including all major exporting countries. Why would we
want to make it harder for our own companies to create jobs here at
home and then allow these other countries to have financing agencies
that compete with us. That is exactly what is going on right now. The
Ex-Im Bank has supported $17 billion in exports. Those are American
jobs, 17 billion. It has a cap of $135 billion. That sounds like a lot,
but an article in the Financial Times showed that the China Development
Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China combined had an estimated $684
billion in total development finance. These two banks combined provide
five times as much financing as the Ex-Im Bank, with its cap of $135
billion.
As Senator Heitkamp explained, this is about jobs, and it is as
simple as that. In FY2015, Ex-Im financing supported 109,000 U.S. jobs.
Since we reauthorized the Ex-Im Bank, nearly 650 transactions have been
approved. Now it is about time that we put the person on the Board--the
Republican nominee--so the Bank can go back to fully functioning and be
able to make transactions that are worth over $10 million. Without a
quorum and Board approval, Ex-Im is not able to adopt any of the
accountability measures or update the loan limits so American
businesses have access to the financing they need to compete globally.
Here we are, three Democratic Senators on the floor simply asking the
Senate to move ahead to confirm a Republican nominee. That may be
irony, but it is irony that is on the backs of the American people and
we need to get it done.
Madam President, I yield the floor to the Senator from New Hampshire.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Perdue). The Senator from New Hampshire.
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Mr. President, I am pleased to join my colleagues
Senator Heitkamp of North Dakota and Senator Klobuchar of Minnesota. I
represent New Hampshire so I think we have three major regions of the
country represented to talk about why we need to make the appointments
to allow the Ex-Im Bank to continue to do their transactions.
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As my colleagues have said, Ex-Im has a five-member Board of
Directors. In order to consider transactions that exceed $10 million,
they have to have a quorum--three people. Right now, again, as Senator
Klobuchar and Senator Heitkamp explained, there isn't a quorum so they
cannot continue to do transactions worth over $10 million. That is
having a real impact on companies across this country.
After a period where Ex-Im was not reauthorized in 2016, where they
were not able to do business, we finally got that legislation through.
They were able to begin operating again.
In 2016, they were able to support about 52,000 U.S. jobs by
authorizing more than $5 billion in transactions--2,000, almost 3,000
export transactions.
At the same time, Ex-Im returned $283.9 million to the U.S. Treasury
and maintained a default rate of 0.266 percent. That is a pretty good
record, but, by comparison, the last year that Ex-Im was fully
operational, they authorized more than $20 billion in almost 4,000
transactions in 2014 when they were fully operational. Those
transactions supported 164,000 U.S. jobs and returned $674 million to
the Treasury.
So one might ask: What is wrong with this picture? Why is the Senate
Banking Committee holding up the person who would allow Ex-Im to
continue to operate at its full capacity and allow it to continue to
help with job creation?
We have seen this very directly in New Hampshire. New Hampshire is a
small State. We are a small business State. Yet we are the State that
Ex-Im chose when they rolled out their small business program to help
small businesses with the financing they needed to export. One of those
first people to take advantage of that program was Boyle Energy
Services & Technology. Their CEO, Michael Boyle, says that without Ex-
Im, he would have to consider offshoring production in order to
continue to grow his business.
Now, BEST does 90 percent of its business overseas, and it relies on
Ex-Im for working capital guarantees. They are not doing a lot of
transactions over $10 million, but we have a lot of companies in New
Hampshire that are doing transactions over $10 million and that are
subcontractors to big companies that are doing those transactions. So
in New Hampshire, we have General Electric, which is very dependent and
needs those exports and that financing. We have a growing aerospace
industry that includes companies like New Hampshire Ball Bearings, and
it includes companies like Albany Engineered Composites, which worked
on the Dreamliner with Boeing.
I talked to the CEO of Albany after he came back from the Paris Air
Show a couple of years ago. He said: The people who are getting the
jobs, getting the accounts, are the companies that can provide
financing around the world.
We make a lot of things in New Hampshire. We have a robust
manufacturing industry because we have companies such as Boyle Energy
Services & Technology, New Hampshire Ball Bearings, GE, and BAE. Yet we
are hamstringing those businesses and their ability to continue to grow
jobs, to continue to grow their business because we are not willing to
make one appointment to the Ex-Im Bank that would allow us to create
jobs in this country and that sends money back to the Treasury.
For all of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle who are so
concerned about the fiscal health of this Nation--and I think we share
that concern on the Democratic side--why would you not reauthorize and
make sure that an agency like the Ex-Im Bank is fully operational, can
create jobs, and can return money to the Treasury? It boggles my mind
that, because of this ideological battle, we are not willing to do what
is practical, what is in the interests of our businesses, of job
creation, of making sure that we can compete around the world with
other companies that are making things.
So I share the concern we heard from Senator Heitkamp and from
Senator Klobuchar, which is that the longer we delay in approving the
nomination of Mark McWatters, the longer we delay in making sure that
Ex-Im is fully operational, the more jobs will be lost, the more
difficult it will be for companies to compete, and the more money that
will be lost to the U.S. Treasury.
So I hope that under the new administration there is more of a
willingness on the part of my colleagues to actually approve these
nominations and to move government forward so that we can create jobs
and we can address the economic challenges that too many people in this
country are facing.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Remembering John Glenn
Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I rise today to talk about the heroin and
prescription drug epidemic that has gripped our country and my State of
Ohio. But first, let me just say a word about John Glenn.
I spoke on the floor yesterday about his passing. We lost him
yesterday afternoon, at age 95. A true icon, his life was really the
life of our country, over the time period from when he joined his
fellow Mercury astronauts and was the first person to orbit the Earth
to the time that he served here in the Senate and went on to found the
Glenn College at Ohio State University--an amazing life.
Later today we are going to ask the full Senate to vote on a
resolution that Senator Sherrod Brown, my colleague from Ohio, and I
are working on. We hope to have that resolution voted on successfully
and allow the entire Senate to pay tribute to a remarkable American
life--a former colleague of ours and one whose seat I am very humbled
and honored to hold today--and that is John Glenn. We will be bringing
that up later during the day.
Opioid Addiction Epidemic
Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, today I wish to talk about an issue that
this Congress has focused on more in the last few months and to commend
the Congress on that but also to continue to raise awareness of it and
allow all of us the opportunity to figure out how we can do more--in
our own way, in our own communities, in our own homes--to be able to
address it. It is now to the point where we have somebody in our great
country dying of an overdose every 12 minutes. One American is losing
his or her life every 12 minutes. In my own State of Ohio, we have been
particularly hard hit by this. We lose one Ohioan every few hours.
The statistics are overwhelming. It is now the No. 1 cause of
accidental death in our country. It has been the case in Ohio since
2007. But behind those statistics are faces, families, and communities.
A 4-year-old boy recently came into his bedroom in Cleveland, OH, in
the Old Brooklyn neighborhood, and he found his dad dead of an
overdose--30 years old. That was just in the news this week.
A few weeks ago, there were two men in Sandusky, OH, who were found
unconscious in a parking lot. Somebody was there and recorded both
their overdose and the first responders coming. The Sandusky first
responders found them barely breathing and brought them back to life
with this miracle drug called Narcan, or naloxone. These first
responders saved their lives, as they saved 16,000 lives last year in
Ohio. This year it will be an even larger number, as we find out after
the year closes. But this video is not for the faint of heart. It is
now out on the Internet. Some have probably seen it. It has gone viral.
But it shows what these first responders and our communities are
dealing with every single day.
I have talked to firefighters around the State, and the Sandusky
firefighters are no exception. They tell me that they have responded to
more overdoses than they have fires over the past year--more overdoses
than they have fires. These are firefighters who are, again, saving
lives every day.
When I was in Canton, OH, last week, I was told there had been twice
as many overdose deaths this year already as last year. Again, the
firefighters and other first responders tell me it is their No. 1 focus
and concern.
When I talk to county prosecutors and sheriffs around Ohio, they also
tell me it is the No. 1 cause of crime in each of their counties in
Ohio, whether
[[Page S6942]]
it is a rural county, an urban county, or a suburban county. It is
everywhere. It knows no ZIP Code. This problem is one that,
unfortunately, has gripped our country like no other.
I started off working on this issue over 20 years ago, when cocaine,
marijuana, and, later, methamphetamines were an issue. Certainly, all
those drugs are horrible. Our prevention efforts led to what was called
the Drug Free Communities Act, which was passed to be able to help
address this issue. Over 2,000 community coalitions have now been
formed as a result of that. But this new wave of addiction, in my view,
is worse. It is worse in terms of the number of overdoses and deaths.
It is worse in terms of the impact on families, tearing them apart. It
is worse than the crimes it creates, mostly with people creating more
and more crime to be able to feed their habit. It is worse in terms of
the ability to get people back on track, to help them with treatment
and recovery. It is a very difficult addiction.
The Congress, including this body, has taken action, and I appreciate
that. Let me tell you why we need to take action.
I talked about these two men in Sandusky, OH, who were found
unconscious and had overdosed. This was something where someone video-
recorded the first responders coming and saving their lives. When one
of these men was revived, Michael Williams, this is what he said:
I have a problem. If I could get help I would. I need it
and I want it.
I believe that if someone needs treatment for addiction and they are
willing to get it, we ought to be able to provide it. That is why it is
important that Congress be involved, that State legislatures be
involved, that we be involved in our communities to ensure that when
someone is ready to get that treatment, it is accessible.
I have met with addicts and their families all over our State. I have
probably met with several hundred addicts or recovering addicts just in
the last couple years alone as we have put together this legislation
and tried to work on something that is actually evidence-based and will
help. So many of them tell me they are ready.
One grieving father told me his daughter had been in and out of
treatment centers. Finally, after several years of trying to deal with
her addiction, she acknowledged that she was ready. He personally took
her to a treatment center in Ohio. They told him and told her that they
would love to help, but they were fully booked. They didn't have a bed
available. They would hope to have one within a couple of weeks. During
those 14 days, he found his daughter in her bedroom having overdosed,
and she died.
Those stories are heart-wrenching, yet they are stories from every
one of our States. So access to treatment is important and access to
longer term recovery is important so people can get back on track to
lead healthy, productive lives once again.
It is also really important that we do a better job on prevention and
education. Ultimately, to keep people out of the funnel of addiction is
the most effective way to deal with this issue. We need to redouble our
efforts there and to raise awareness, among other things, of the
connection between prescription drugs and heroin and these other
synthetic heroins, these opioids, because four out of five heroin
addicts in your State--you are representing a State here in this body--
probably started with prescription drugs and then shifted over to
heroin.
There is an opportunity for us to do more about that by raising that
awareness, because when people learn more about that connection, they
are smarter about the danger that is inherent in taking these often-
narcotic painkillers that are sometimes overprescribed.
To raise awareness about this issue, I have come to the floor every
week we have been in session since February. This is now our 29th
speech about this issue--the opportunity to talk about it, to raise
awareness about it. I will say again that over the course of those 29
weeks, a lot of things have happened by raising awareness.
One is, this body passed legislation called the Comprehensive
Addiction and Recovery Act, otherwise known as CARA. We passed it in
this Chamber after taking it through committee after 3 years of work--
conferences, bringing people in from around the country, experts. The
legislation focuses on how to come up with a better way to do
prevention, education, treatment, recovery, and to help our first
responders with naloxone--this Narcan miracle drug--provide training,
help get the prescription drugs off the shelves, drug take-back
programs.
All of this resulted in CARA passing this body by a vote of 92 to 2.
That never happens around here. It was overwhelming bipartisan support
for legislation that is needed. This past summer, late this summer,
President Obama signed that legislation into law, and it is now being
implemented. I commend the administration for moving as quickly as
possible.
There are a couple of programs that are already up and running. We
have now provided, for instance, for nurse practitioners and physicians
assistants to be able to help with regard to medication-assisted
treatment. That is something that was urgent in my home State of Ohio
and other places, the need to have more people able to help recovering
addicts get back on track. That is happening right now. That is already
being implemented.
Other aspects of the legislation, including some of the prevention
programs and the national awareness campaign on connecting prescription
drugs to heroin, are still being put into effect. Today, I again urge
the administration to move as quickly as possible and for the
administration-elect, the new administration, to be prepared to step in
to ensure that this legislation moves quickly.
I think the legislation, CARA, is probably the most important anti-
drug legislation we have passed in this body in at least two decades.
It is evidence-based. It will improve prevention and treatment. It is
the first time ever we have put long-term recovery into any
legislation, which is incredibly important for success. We talked
earlier about the difficulty of getting people out of the grip of
addiction and having that longer term recovery aspect. Think of
recovery housing and being supported by a supportive group rather than
going back to the old neighbor or going back to a family who is
suffering from this issue. That longer term recovery really helps to
improve the rates of success. That is in our legislation.
It also begins to remove this stigma of addiction. In some respects,
I think that may be the most important part of the legislation. It
acknowledges that addiction is a disease, and as a disease, it needs to
be treated as such. When people come forward to be able to get
treatment--and probably 8 out of 10 heroin addicts are not--you
obviously see much better results for the person, for the family, and
for the community.
For example, think about Ashley from Dayton, OH. At just 32 years
old, she died of a heroin overdose recently, leaving her three small
children without a mom. After Ashley died, her mom went back and looked
at her diary to see what she had said during her last several weeks.
She found it, she read it, and what Ashley wrote in her diary will
break your heart. It details her daily struggle with addiction. It
talks about the pain and the suffering. Here is one passage:
I am so ashamed. . . . I am an addict. I will always be an
addict. . . . I know I need help [but] I'm afraid to get it .
. . because I know I'll need to go away for it. . . . I'll be
away from my kids.
CARA was designed to help women like Ashley. It not only helps erase
the stigma of addiction and get women like her to come forward,
acknowledge their illness, and get the help they need, but it allows
women in recovery to bring their kids with them. You have family
treatment centers and funding available for those kinds of treatment
centers and for longer term recovery so we can keep families together.
It authorizes $181 million in investments in opioid programs every
year going forward, and it ensures that taxpayer dollars are spent more
wisely and effectively by channeling them to programs that have been
tested and that we know, based on evidence, actually work.
Even with these new policies in place under CARA, we are going to
have to fight every year for the funding as part of the appropriations
process, and we are doing that today. In the most recent continuing
resolution, which
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funds the government until tonight, we were able to get $37 million in
short-term funding to be sure CARA was fully funded during that 4-month
period of time.
We will soon be voting on the next 4 months or so of a continuing
resolution, and once again, we have fought the good fight on both sides
of the aisle. We have asked the Appropriations Committee to include the
funding for CARA. We have been successful in doing that. There is full
funding in the continuing resolution that will be voted on shortly that
provides for the implementation of this legislation. That is very
important because if that funding had not been provided for this short
term, it would have been difficult to get the programs up and going on
prevention, treatment, recovery, and helping first responders with
regard to Narcan training and supply. That is important. If we fully
fund it and we support getting more people into treatment, we will save
lives, there is no question about it. If we fully fund the prevention,
we will save lives.
In addition to that funding, under the 21st Century Cures Act, which
was just passed by the House and Senate over the past few days, there
is additional funding, and it is immediate funding that goes to the
States. It allows the States to use their own programs that they have
through block grants to help address this crisis we face. I strongly
support that. I think this epidemic is such that we need to do both--
have the longer term, evidence-based programs in place year after year
for the future, but also immediately give our States an infusion of
funds to be able to help with their existing programs.
I believe that legislation is critical to my home State of Ohio, and
I know how it is going to be used; it will be used well. Our Department
of Mental Health & Addiction Services needs it.
That legislation was an authorization in the 21st Century Cures Act.
It was 2 years of funding--$500 million next year, $500 million the
next year--to fund dealing with this crisis immediately. That funding
is now shifted into the continuing resolution. So for this year, under
this appropriations bill we are about to vote on, we now have that
additional funding of $500 million. So we had to do the authorization
and then the appropriation, and that is part of the CR.
That is something people should think about as they look at this
continuing resolution. We know this funding will help because we know
prevention keeps people out of this funnel of addiction the most
effective way, and the treatment can work. I have met so many people
across Ohio who have taken advantage of treatment, of a supportive
environment that comes with recovery programs, and have been
successful.
There are so many stories of hope. One is the story of Rachel Motil
from Columbus, OH. As a teenager, Rachel abused alcohol. She then
turned to pills, and then once the pills were too expensive--as we
said, all too common--she switched to heroin. She stole from her
family, even selling her mother's arthritis medication. She stole
jewelry from her boyfriend's parents. She wrote herself checks from her
mom's checkbook.
For those who are watching and listening who have members of their
family who are suffering from this illness, you know what I am talking
about.
She received help, finally. Her help came from Netcare crisis
services initially--detoxing and getting into treatment--and then
Maryhaven Treatment Center.
I visited Maryhaven in October. I had a chance to meet with some of
the recovering addicts who were there and talk to them about what they
had been through.
Rachel is an example of a success story. She is now 2 years sober and
studying finance at Columbus State Community College. She is a success.
If we fully fund CARA and if we get this legislation in place with
regard to these Cures appropriations, we will see more success stories
like that. We will save lives across our country. For all those who are
suffering from the disease of addiction--like Ashley from Dayton,
Michael from Sandusky, or Rachel from Northland--let's do the right
thing. Let's fight for them. Let's implement CARA quickly. Let's build
on this commonsense law. Let's support additional funding now so we can
help as many Americans as possible. By doing so, I believe we can begin
to turn the tide on this addiction and not only save lives but help
some of our constituents lead more productive and full lives.
I yield back my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Mississippi.
Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to proceed, but
before I begin, I ask unanimous consent that the Senator from
California, Mrs. Boxer, be recognized following my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. COCHRAN. Mr. President, this resolution will provide government
funding through April 28 at the level prescribed in last year's budget
agreement.
I urge the Senate to support the resolution.
It provides funding to continue counterterrorism operations in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and Syria. It supports our allies through the European
Reassurance Initiative. It includes funding for humanitarian assistance
and to protect American diplomats.
The resolution also funds important priorities here at home. It
appropriates $872 million to fight opioid abuse and support innovative
cancer research. These funds will begin to implement the CURES Act,
which the Senate passed earlier this week by a vote of 94 to 5.
The resolution also contains funding to respond to Hurricane Matthew,
severe flooding in Louisiana and other recent natural disasters. In
total, $4 billion is available under this bill and will be allocated to
recovery programs that benefit 45 of our States.
The resolution also provides funding to help Flint, MI, respond to
the contamination of its water supply and to help communities around
the country provide safe drinking water.
Mr. President, I urge the adoption of this resolution.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I want to thank Senator Cochran for his
courtesy in getting the time for me.
Coal Miner Health Care Benefits and WRDA
Mr. President, some people may wonder why on a Friday we are still
here and we are still arguing and we are still debating. There are
several issues that are troubling to many people in the Senate and in
the country, and a couple of them have a focus on them today. How this
all ends remains to be seen, but I feel it is important for the
American people to understand that there are some people here who are
willing to take the time to explain why we can't just go home right
now. We are no different from any other American. We don't want to have
to work on the weekend. We don't want to have to be here when we don't
have to be, giving speeches that we don't have to give.
I also want to give a shout-out to my friends who are calling
attention to the plight of widows of miners--miners who went into the
coal mines knowing full well they risked their lives every day. They
knew that if something happened to them, their widows would be taken
care of. If we can't take care of widows and children who are left
behind because a coal miner risked his or her life, who are we fighting
for and what are we doing here?
Senator Manchin, Senator Heitkamp, Senator Casey, Senator Schumer,
Senator Warner--several of my colleagues--have been very clear. They
have been taking to this floor warning the majority, the Republicans,
that we want to take care of these widows. The money is there. It is
there for them. Instead, my Republican friends want to take it away.
You know what? That is not happening without a fight. That is not
happening without a fight. If we can't defend widows and orphans, I
have news for you, we don't deserve to be here.
Two days ago, I gave what was to be my final major speech on the
floor of the Senate. Believe me, I don't want to be here. I don't want
to talk on the floor. I wanted to go out with a great big smile on my
face after working in politics for 40 years, but instead I am here to
explain an issue that is very troubling.
If you asked the average person what troubles them about Congress--
they hate Congress. I think we get a 17-, 18-
[[Page S6944]]
maybe 12-percent rating. It is bad. It is hurtful. One of the things
they hate about Congress is when we have a special interest rider
dropped on a bill. No one has looked at it, there have been no
hearings, and it has nothing to do with the bill. People are then
forced into a situation where either they swallow that garbage or they
can't vote for the underlying bill, which may be very important to
their State, their constituents, and their country. That is what is
happening on the continuing resolution to keep the government open.
There is a paltry 4-month extension on the health care for the widows
of coal miners. What good does that do? They are going to be frightened
to death. What if they go to the doctor in that first month and the
doctor says: I am watching a lump. It may be cancerous. Come back in 3
months. They don't know if they will even have health care. It is a
disgrace. The widows are not protected in the continuing resolution.
What are we facing? Either we shut down the government or fight for
the widows. OK. This is what people hate about Congress, and we don't
have to do it--not at all. If you believe you have great legislation,
then go through the channels, introduce the bill, and have a hearing.
If you think the miners' widows deserve only 4 months, let's have a
discussion about it.
We have another situation on another bill. The bill is called WRDA.
You may have heard about it. What does it stand for? It stands for the
Water Resources Development Act. This WRDA bill is a beautiful bill. My
committee has worked on it for more than a year. I am proud to be the
ranking member on that committee. I was the chairman, but when
Republicans took the Senate back, Senator Inhofe became the chairman.
We worked hand in glove. We set aside our differences, we set aside
poison pills, and we said we are going to put together a great bill,
and we did. It is a great bill. It deals with flood control, ensures
there is environmental restoration and that our ports are dredged and
can, in fact, support the kind of commerce we need in the greatest
country in the world. We have authorization for funding in there for
desalination because we know we have droughts in the western States,
and we need to work on that. We have authorization for ways to use
technology to ensure we can increase our water supply, so we have
authorization in there for water recharging and water recycling. It is
quite a bill. It has authorization in there to move forward with all of
the Army Corps projects that have been looked at up and down and inside
out.
What we have in there for my State is incredible. I don't think I
have ever had a bill that did more for my State. We have projects in
Sacramento, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco area. We have projects
from north to south, east to west. We have levee fixes and the Lake
Tahoe restoration that Senator Feinstein and I worked on. We have very
important ecosystem restoration. We have projects in Orange County and
all over the State.
Why do I say this? I say this to make the following point: If Senator
Boxer has all of those great things for her State in the WRDA bill, why
is she standing here saying, ``Vote no''? It isn't easy. It breaks my
heart, but I will tell you why. In the middle of the night, coming from
the ceiling and airdropped into this bill was a dangerous 98-page rider
which will become law with the WRDA bill. What does it do? It attacks
the Endangered Species Act head-on. It gives operational instructions
on how to move water in my State away from the salmon fisheries and to
big agribusiness, regardless of what the science says. If somebody says
``Oh, my God, this is terrible; we will lose the salmon fishery,'' it
will take a very long time to have that study, and it will be too late
to save the fishery. This isn't just about the salmon; it is about the
people who fish. They are distressed about this issue. They represent
tens of thousands of families who rely on having enough water for the
fishery.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the letter signed by this
vast array of fishermen and some letters from all of those who rely on
salmon fishery be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
GoldenGate Salmon Association,
December 6, 2016.
Re OPPOSE--Anti-Salmon Provisions in WRDA
Dear Congressional Leaders: I write from the Golden Gate
Salmon Association asking that you oppose the California
drought language in the Water Resources Development Act
(WRDA) bill.
This language calls for severe weakening of existing
protections for salmon in California's Central Valley.
Although those protections are designed primarily to aid ESA-
listed winter and spring run salmon and steelhead, they also
provide great benefit to unlisted fall run salmon which
supplies the west coast fishery.
Tens of thousands of fishing jobs in both California, and
Oregon hang in the balance.
The existing protections are based on the best available
science, which has been affirmed in multiple court cases up
to the Ninth US Court of Appeals as well as through an
outside scientific review by the National Research Council
requested by Senator Feinstein. The proposed language orders
science-based measures to balance water for agriculture,
municipal, industrial and fishing industry be tossed out and
replaced with a political prescription aimed at rewarding a
small group in the western San Joaquin Valley and points
south.
California salmon fishermen, both sport and commercial,
have suffered from very poor fishing seasons over the last
two years. This is primarily due to the effects of drought
and poor water management, which have undercut the ability of
salmon to reproduce and survive in Central Valley rivers. Now
is the time to help these salmon runs recover, not tear them
down more.
The economic value of salmon derives not only from
commercially caught fish, but also from the hundreds of
millions of dollars sport fishermen spend annually to pursue
salmon. These dollars breathe life into the not only the
California coastal economy, but also inland river communities
where recreational salmon fishing is big.
Commercial fishermen have suffered after not only back to
back poor salmon seasons but also disruption in their other
main income source, the Dungeness crab fishery. Adding more
injury is not right especially when there are other, more
sustainable ways to address California's water future. The
drought bill language would allow far more diversion of
northern California water to the massive pumps that send it
south, especially at the sensitive time of year when baby
salmon are trying to migrate to the ocean. As water is
diverted from its natural course, so too are baby salmon
which mostly die along the way to the pumps. Those that
survive to the pumps usually die shortly thereafter.
The National Marine Fisheries Service, which authored the
salmon protections currently in place, has tacitly
acknowledged the need to strengthen, not weaken them, by
calling for both amending the existing biological opinion as
well as formally reinitiating consultation on the opinion.
The last thing we need now is political interference in a
process best left to fishery scientists and biologists.
Adoption of the Feinstein/McCarthy drought bill language
into law would undo some of the progress we've made restoring
our salmon runs since 2009, when the existing biop replaced a
prior one found to be illegally un-protective of salmon.
Under that prior, weak set of regulations, we saw our salmon
runs decline to the point where the ocean fishery was shut
for the first time in history in 2008 and 2009. The language
being considered now would send us back to a similar
desperate situation rapidly. It would almost certainly lead
to another steep collapse of Central Valley salmon runs.
Please do what you can to stop this drought proposal from
becoming law, including opposing cloture in the Senate. We
have new and much better ways to address our water future in
California that some old thinkers simply refuse to consider.
Sincerely,
John McManus,
Executive Director,
Golden Gate Salmon Association.
____
December 6, 2016.
Salmon Fishing Industry Opposes California Drought Rider in WRDA
Dear Honorable Members: The undersigned commercial fishing
industry groups strongly oppose Mr. McCarthy's California
water language inserted in the House version of the Water
Resources Development Act. King salmon was once the West's
most important fishery. It now hangs in the balance, as what
should be an infinitely renewable resource has consistently
lost political battles in the war over California's water.
This last-minute rider is a knife in the gut of the thousands
of commercial fishermen and fishery-dependent businesses that
harvest and supply local, wild-caught seafood to millions of
American consumers.
The language purports to offer drought relief, but in so
doing, it picks drought winners and drought losers in
California and beyond. The winners are the handful of
industrial irrigators of the San Joaquin Valley that stand to
benefit from rollbacks of the Endangered Species Act and
other salmon protections, and the politically (not
scientifically) mandated operation of the federal water
system in California. The losers are the fishery-dependent
businesses, such as commercial and charter-for-hire
fishermen, seafood
[[Page S6945]]
wholesalers, ice docks, fuel docks, shipwrights,
manufacturers, restaurants, hotels and direct-to-consumer
seafood purveyors that make a living on the availability of
salmon. It's a policy choice to sacrifice a naturally
sustainable food system for a food system that requires
government subsidies, massive publicly-funded infrastructure
projects, and continual litigation. It is the wrong choice
for the small businesses and families that harvest this
resource on the West Coast.
West Coast salmon fisheries are in crisis. The salmon
fishing communities in all three states have requested or are
considering the need for fishery disaster declarations for
the 2016 due to extremely low productivity. We are a proud
community that wants to work, not resort to government
handouts. We ask that you do everything in your power to
prevent this language from becoming law.
Thank you for your consideration.
Mike McCorkle for Southern California Trawlers Association
(Santa Barbara), Stephanie Mutz for Commercial Fishermen of
Santa Barbara, Bill Ward for Port San Luis Fishermen's
Marketing Association, Lori French for Morro Bay Commercial
Fishermen's Organization, Mike Ricketts for Monterey
Fishermen's Marketing Association, Tom McCray for Moss
Landing Commercial Fishermen's Association, Joe Stoops for
Santa Cruz Fishermen's Marketing Association, Lisa Damrosch
for Half Moon Bay Seafood Marketing Association, Larry
Collins for San Francisco Crab Boat Owners Association, Don
Marshall for Small Boat Commercial Salmon Fishermen's
Association (at-large), Lorne Edwards for Bodega Bay
Fishermen's Marketing Association, Bill Forkner for Salmon
Trollers Marketing Association (Ft. Bragg), Dave Bitts for
Humboldt Fishermen's Marketing Association, Tim Sloane for
Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen's Associations, Joel
Kawahara for Coastal Trollers Association (Washington).
____
December 6, 2016.
Dear Senator: On behalf of the undersigned organizations,
we are writing to urge you to strip the anti-environmental
rider regarding California water from the Water Resources
Development Act (WRDA) (Subtitle J of Title III of S. 612).
This poison pill rider would gut environmental protection in
California's Bay-Delta, threatening thousands of salmon
fishing jobs and worsening water quality conditions. These
provisions are inconsistent with California law and expressly
violate the requirements of biological opinions under the
Endangered Species Act, and as a result are likely to lead to
extensive litigation and undermine progress on long-term
solutions. The White House announced today that the
Administration opposes this language in WRDA. The broad
opposition to this rider demonstrates that its inclusion
threatens to scuttle enactment of WRDA.
This rider would not only affect California, but also
threatens the thousands of fishing jobs across the West Coast
that depend on salmon from California's Bay-Delta watershed.
Moreover, the rider would authorize construction of new dams
across the 17 Reclamation states, without Congressional
review and authorization for these new projects.
Drought, not environmental laws, is the primary cause of
low water supplies in California. The state of California is
working to protect the environment and the economy by
investing in sustainable water supply solutions including
water use efficiency, water recycling, urban stormwater
capture, and improved groundwater recharge and management.
The Federal government should not undermine environmental
protections under the guise of drought relief, but should
instead complement state investments in sustainable water
solutions.
Adding a poison pill rider undermining the Endangered
Species Act and threatening thousands of fishing jobs sets up
a false choice between clean water in Flint and healthy
waterways in California. This is outrageous and unacceptable.
The people of Flint have waited too long for safe drinking
water to be victimized again by this kind of political
backroom dealing.
We urge you to strike this anti-environmental rider from
the bill. If this language remains in the bill, we urge you
to vote to oppose cloture.
Sincerely,
Natural Resources Defense Council, League of Conservation
Voters, Defenders of Wildlife, Earthjustice, Sierra Club,
National Audubon Society, Clean Water Action, Greenpeace.
____
E2,
December 6, 2016.
Dear Members of Congress: As business leaders focused on
policies that promote a growing economy and healthy
environment, we ask that you oppose cloture on the Water
Resources Development Act (WRDA) if it contains the recently
added language regarding California water.
Environmental Entrepreneurs (E2) is a national, nonpartisan
group of business leaders who advocate for smart policies
that drive innovation in business while protecting the
environment. Our members have founded or funded more than
2,500 companies, created more than 600,000 jobs, and manage
more than $100 billion in venture and private equity capital.
In California, E2 has more than 500 members who belong to
three regional E2 chapters and who do business across the
state.
WRDA is critical legislation that supports dozens of badly
needed water infrastructure projects in just as many
communities, including emergency funds to help alleviate the
crisis in Flint, MI. Moreover, it is unacceptable that this
controversial language, which undermines environmental
protections for wildlife and threatens the tens of thousands
of fishing and recreation jobs that depend on them, was added
to the legislation at the eleventh hour.
Water shortages in California are due to a sustained
drought, overutilization of resources and a low groundwater
table. Unfortunately this newly-added language will not solve
any of those issues. What these short-sighted provisions
could do, however, is damage the large salmon fishing
industry that is fed from the Central Valley, and hurt
thousands of fishing and recreational jobs up and down the
West Coast.
Though we agree there is an urgent need to address
California drought and competing needs in the state, we think
that should be done through a comprehensive process in stand-
alone legislation that factors in the importance of the
fishing industry and other economic issues.
E2 urges you to aid a consensus WRDA bill that solves
problems without putting jobs at risk.
Sincerely,
Bob Keefe,
Executive Director,
Environmental Entrepreneurs (E2).
____
Trout Unlimited,
December 8, 2016.
Dear Members of the House and Senate: Trout Unlimited is
opposed to the drought provision that has been added to the
WRDA bill being considered by the House, as it undermines an
otherwise salutary Water Resources Development Act (WRDA)
bill developed in a bipartisan manner by the House and Senate
authorizing committees. We urge Congress to strip this
drought provision (Subtitle J--California Water,
Sec. Sec. 4001-4014) and pass the WRDA bill before it
adjourns this month. We urge Congress to renew its efforts to
address California and western drought through an open and
collaborative process to arrive at solutions which work for
all stakeholders.
Trout Unlimited works with agricultural producers, states,
counties, communities and other stakeholders throughout the
West to find solutions to pernicious drought. Durable and
fair drought solutions are best developed through open and
collaborative processes with all stakeholders. The Yakima and
Klamath pieces of legislation in the Energy bill are two
excellent regional examples, but in fact on the ground
throughout the West, there are many more local examples of
drought solutions which help rivers and fish, producers and
communities.
Right now drought is most severe in California. Thus, we
understand and appreciate the hard work that Senator
Feinstein, Representatives McCarthy, Valadao and others have
invested in trying to help interests in California deal with
the drought. But, the drought provision added to the House
WRDA bill in recent days is not the result of an open and
collaborative legislative process.
Though California is the drought hardship epicenter,
drought is prevalent in other areas of the West, and may well
be coming soon to many others areas of the country. Congress
should reward open and collaborative processes for dealing
with drought. All of our interests must face drought
challenges together. All of our interests must be included in
fair and balanced solutions. Congress should not reward
legislation not developed in an open and collaborative
process--in California or any other state--that adversely
impacts so many stakeholders.
Some sections of the ``Subtitle J--California Water''
drought provision extend west-wide, and risk upending years
of local, watershed-based investment by stakeholders to
arrive at water scarcity solutions that meet agricultural,
environmental and municipal needs. Section 4007, for example,
authorizes the ``design, study, and construction or
expansion'' of new federal dams across the seventeen western
states without Congressional oversight. Sec. 4007(b)(1).
Section 4007(h)(1) also authorizes $335 million for new dam
building. Allowing the Interior Department to authorize
federal dams without Congressional oversight breaks with
decades of longstanding law and practice.
Even more significantly, unilaterally favoring and
underwriting a federal dam sets back local, watershed-based,
collaborative efforts to find multi-pronged solutions to
drought and water scarcity that benefit all stakeholders:
agricultural, environmental, and municipal.
The legislation would directly harm Trout Unlimited
members, fishing-related businesses, and the communities that
depend on them. Central Valley salmon, when healthy,
contribute $1.4 billion to the economy and support 23,000
jobs. This fishery constitutes 60 percent of Oregon's coastal
salmon catch and part of Washington's as well. It would be a
tragedy to have salmon disappear from the Sacramento and San
Joaquin rivers. The drought has been hard on everyone, but
nobody has been harder hit than commercial and recreational
fishing businesses.
Finally, Congress should consider that the bill would
undermine actions taken under California water law. This will
lead to needless litigation, igniting more controversy and
threatening the progress that California and the Interior
Department has made toward finding sustainable drought
solutions. Federal policies should support rather than
undermine state water law.
[[Page S6946]]
It is never too late in a Congress to renew efforts to find
lasting, fair, solutions to drought problems. Many members
have worked hard on important provisions of the WRDA bill
that deserve passage, including several provisions which will
restore watersheds and provide clean drinking water. We hope
Congress will not hold those meritorious provisions hostage
to an unworkable and unrelated drought measure. We urge the
House and the Senate to work together to find a better
solution to the California drought, eliminate Subtitle J--
California Water, Sec. Sec. 4001-4014, from the House WRDA
bill, and approve the WRDA bill before adjourning this
Congress.
Sincerely,
Steve Moyer,
Vice President, Government Affairs,
Trout Unlimited.
Mrs. BOXER. I know it is a holiday. God knows I know that. This year
Hanukkah and Christmas come at the same time, and my grandkids
celebrate both. I want to go home, but the people who depend on the
water to support the salmon fishing industry may not be able to
celebrate this year because someone over there named Kevin McCarthy
dropped--in the dead of night--a rider on a beautiful bill called WRDA
and wrecked it. He never once thought about the people who rely on
fishing. It is a disgrace. Who is signing the letter, saying, ``Don't
do this, don't do this, don't do this''? The Pacific Coast Federation
of Fishermen's Associations, the Golden Gate Salmon Association, the
Southern California Trawlers Association of Santa Barbara, the
Commercial Fishermen of Santa Barbara, the Port San Luis Fishermen's
Marketing Association, the Morro Bay Commercial Fishermen's
Organization, the Monterey Fishermen's Marketing Association, the Moss
Landing Commercial Fishermen's Association, the Santa Cruz Fishermen's
Marketing Association, the Half Moon Bay Fishermen's Marketing
Association, the San Francisco Crab Boat Owner's Association, the Small
Boat Salmon Fishermen's Association, the Fishermen's Marketing
Association of Bodega Bay, the Salmon Trollers Marketing Association,
the Humboldt Fishermen's Marketing Association, the Coastal Trollers
Association. I am putting those in the Record.
In all of my lifetime serving, I have never seen such an outcry from
one industry. There is no disagreement. The water will be taken away
for agribusiness regardless of what the scientists think.
You may say: Senator, what was controlling this before this power
grab? It is a law. It is a law called the Endangered Species Act.
You may then ask: What liberal politician or President signed that?
Let me give you the answer. It was a Republican named Richard Nixon.
What breaks my heart more than anything else--and I have said it
before--is how the environment has become such a hot-button issue.
I want to talk about the Endangered Species Act. We have landmark
laws in our Nation. It makes our Nation great. We have the Clean Water
Act, Safe Drinking Water Act, Endangered Species Act, the Toxic Control
Substances Act, and the Brownfields Law. These are landmark laws
beloved by the people.
If you went out on the street or if I asked up in the gallery how
many people think we should protect our endangered species, I would be
surprised if more than a few disagreed with that. Let me show you why.
What has been saved by the Endangered Species Act? How about nothing
less than the American bald eagle. This species was on its way to
extinction, but because of the Endangered Species Act, we learned that
there were only enough left for a few years, and so the endangered
species law said: No, no, no, no. We have to change what we do and
protect this species. The American eagle was protected because Richard
Nixon, as well as Democrats and Republicans, believed we needed an
Endangered Species Act. That was in the 1960s. Now we have a frontal
assault on the Endangered Species Act.
Let me show you what else we have saved under the Endangered Species
Act. This is the California condor. It is a magnificent species. It is
God's creation. We talk about our faith here, and I never ever doubt
anybody's faith, but I am saying if you are truly a believer, then you
work to protect God's creations. It is part of our responsibility. Here
it is. What would have happened if this Endangered Species Act had been
changed to say, ``Don't worry about the science, do whatever you want,
and if it is bothering the hunters or fishermen, just throw it out the
window''? We wouldn't have saved these creatures.
I will show some others. This is the Peregrine falcon. Just looking
at this magnificent thing makes you smile. Again, it is endangered. If
there had been legislation like what was dropped at midnight from Kevin
McCarthy on the Endangered Species Act, we might have lost this
magnificent creature. So to say that we should just go home to our
families, children, and grandchildren without calling attention to what
is on the WRDA bill that I love--let me be clear. Personally, I win
either way. One way I win is if we stop this bill and take off this
horrible rider and pass it clean. That would be the most amazing thing.
And if we don't, I bring home 26 incredible projects to my people. It
is not about me.
We have one more to show you. This is the great sea turtle. This
beautiful creature was saved by the Endangered Species Act. If we had
similar legislation about this magnificent creature and it said that 7
out of 10 people believe it is harming their business, let's just
forget about it, we don't really need it, we would not have saved
this. So when you drop this--I call it a midnight rider--on a beautiful
bill and say we are going to violate the Endangered Species Act unless
somebody can prove it is really bad, you are destroying the Endangered
Species Act. What right does anybody have to do that in the middle of
the night, in the darkness, before Christmas, days before government
funding runs out?
I say nobody should have the right to do it. Since they did it, I am
going to make noise about it. Believe me, I am on the way out the door.
Did I want to do this? No. I did my speech. I was so thrilled to do it.
My family was up there. I am in the middle of a battle now. Well, I
guess that is how it is. You come in fighting, you go out fighting.
That is just the way it goes.
A lot of people say: Oh, Barbara, why do you want to do this? You had
such a beautiful speech. It was a high note. I can't. I am alive. I
know what is going on. I am going to tell the truth. The truth is,
Kevin McCarthy has been trying to get more water for big agribusiness
in his--water in my State is very contentious.
My view about water is that everybody comes to the table. We work it
out together. I don't like the water war. He has launched another water
war battle for big agribusiness against the salmon fishery. It is ugly.
It is wrong. It is going to wind up at the courthouse door anyway. Why
are we doing this? It is not right. We don't need to fight about water.
All the stakeholders just have to sit down and work together.
I love the fact that my State produces more fruit and vegetables and
nuts--it is the breadbasket of the world. Under most measurements,
farmers use 80 percent of the water--80 percent of the water. In a
drought situation, why would you then hurt the other stakeholders
because an almond grower wants to do more almond growing? It takes 1
gallon to produce one almond. I love almonds. Believe me, they are a
fabulous food. There is a recent study that they are really healthy for
you. I want everyone to eat almonds. But they export a ton of them. We
have to preserve the environment in our State and not run these
fishermen out.
What has really been interesting is the editorials that have come
about as a result of this midnight rider.
I would like to highlight an editorial by the Sacramento Bee on
December 7, 2016, titled ``Feinstein, McCarthy strike water deal, but
war goes on.''
This is it. This is what I am reading from.
``The Federal legislation almost surely will result in increased
water exports, its basic point, and contains unfortunate language that
would allow Federal authorities to override scientists and order water
exports that could further damage the delta and fisheries.''
What is the delta? The delta is a series of islands through which the
natural rainwater runs. The water gets purified. It runs into our
rivers and streams. It supports the salmon fishery, and it supports
clean drinking water, but if you rip away that water, you are going to
have more salt in the
[[Page S6947]]
water that remains. It is going to be more expensive for the people to
get it to drinking quality.
So what you have is a circumstance where you are not only running the
salmon fishery out, but you are also destroying the water quality--the
drinking water quality--for many users in the area who rely on the
delta water and making it far more expensive to clean up the water
because it has so much salt in it.
Here is the Sacramento Bee saying that ``the unfortunate language
would allow Federal authorities to override scientists and order water
exports that could further damage the Delta and fisheries.''
I think I have explained to you what that means. It destroys and
harms not only the salmon fishery, but it also destroys and harms
drinking water. Now, the bill, it says--this is the rider that is on my
beautiful WRDA bill that I love so much, that I wrote with Jim Inhofe.
``The bill authorizes additional pumping unless fishery scientists
can prove there will be damage to fish, virtually an impossible
standard.''
So when those who support this say: Oh, don't worry, Barbara, yes,
they will pump at the maximum ability constantly, but there has to be a
report. Well, by the time they finish their report, there will be a lot
of dead fish or no fish.
It goes on to say: ``But no one should kid themselves. This bill will
result in damage to the environment. And it won't end California's
water wars.''
Let me say that again. This is the Sacramento Bee. This is not known
for any type of liberal editorializing.
``But no one should kid themselves. This bill will result in damage
to the environment. And it won't end California's water wars.''
So we put that in the Record along with all of the different fishing
groups that strongly oppose this. So we are here, and everyone is
calling me: Oh, let's go home. Let's go home. I want to go home. I
really want to go home because this is the end of my last term, but I
can't. Let the clock go. It will run out. But the fact remains, we have
to take a stand against these midnight riders that drop from the
ceiling that attack Richard Nixon's Endangered Species Act that we all
supported forever until now. I guess it is easy to say, I support the
Endangered Species Act until someone says: Oh, there is an endangered
species. Then you say: Oh, never mind. No. No. No.
You support it because you want to protect God's creatures, and then
you keep supporting it. You don't attack it on a rider that was dropped
at midnight, never had a hearing on a bill that has nothing to do with
the subject matter. What they did belongs in the Energy bill, but they
did not want to put it in there. They wanted to put it in WRDA because
WRDA is so popular. WRDA is a beautiful bill, a beautiful bill that I
worked on that is going to be my legacy bill.
So here I am standing up making a big fuss on my own bill and saying
vote no on it. That is really hard. I hope no one in this body ever has
to do this. It is a very difficult thing. Now, you may ask: Who really
cares about the salmon fishery? Who really cares about the Endangered
Species Act?
Well, how about every environmental organization that I know of in
the country.
So who are they? They are the Natural Resources Defense Council, that
has clearly stated this is a violation of the Endangered Species Act;
the League of Conservation Voters, an organization that follows this.
They are scoring this vote. They are scoring this vote; Defenders of
Wildlife, who are committed to protecting God's creatures; Earth
Justice; the Sierra Club; National Audubon Society; Clean Water Action;
Greenpeace; Trout Unlimited--that has a huge participation of
fishermen, recreational fishermen; Environmental Entrepreneurs.
These are actually business leaders in this country who care about
what we do. I will read a little bit of the Trout Unlimited letter.
Trout Unlimited is opposed to the drought provision that
has been added to the WRDA bill being considered by the House
as it undermines an otherwise salutary Water Resources
Development Act bill developed in a bipartisan manner by the
House and Senate.
What a beautiful opening sentence. They get it. Trout Unlimited--they
are not liberals or conservatives. They just like to go and have a good
time with recreational fishing. There will not be a fishery left
because of the bill that was dropped from the ceiling at midnight,
because someone wanted to take water away from the salmon fishery and
give it to agribusiness, disgraceful.
Why don't we work together on getting more water? This is not a
drought bill. It is called the California drought bill. It is
ridiculous. It has nothing to do with increasing the water. All it does
is move water from one place to another, and the additional
authorizations on it--on the rider--are already in the underlying WRDA
bill.
We don't need this. It calls for desal. It calls for water
recharging. It calls for recycling. So this is a phony name of the
bill, California drought bill. It does zero, zero, zero to help with
the drought. All it does is it attacks the fishing industry. That is
it.
Thousands of jobs, because one Congressman over there represents a
little district, and he is delivering to agribusiness. It is shameful.
We stand here and we decry the fact that the widows of the miners are
getting the shaft--and they are. I stand with them. I ask my colleagues
to vote no on a bill that contains language that will undo the salmon
fisheries on the entire West Coast.
I speak for Maria Cantwell, who will also be down here to speak, I
speak for Ron Wyden, I speak for Jeff Merkley, I speak for Patty
Murray. We are apoplectic about this. You want to do in the salmon
fishery, have the guts to have a hearing on it. Have the guts to look
in the faces of those salmon fishery people, have the guts to tell it
to their faces. Don't drop this thing at the last minute,
Christmastime, and we are all going to be good little girls and boys
and say: Oh, we are going to go home. No, we are not. We are not. It is
not right. You know, I grew up, there was right and there was wrong.
You can't turn away from wrong, even if it is inconvenient. It is
inconvenient.
I have stood alone on this floor. I am not standing alone on this,
but I would if I had to.
Let's see what some of these environmentalists have said. How about
E2, the environmental business leaders--what do they say?
``As business leaders focused on policies that promote a growing
economy and healthy environment, we ask that you vote no on the cloture
on Water Resources Development Act if it contains the added language
regarding California water.''
They say they are a nonpartisan group of business leaders, and they
have funded venture capital and companies. They said that WRDA is
critical and that this language will not solve any drought issues. Its
shortsighted provisions could damage the large salmon industry that is
fed from the Central Valley and hurt thousands of fishing and
recreational jobs up and down the west coast.
What I am telling you is the truth.
Here is a bill that is called the California drought bill, and it
does nothing--nothing at all--to bring water in because all of the
language that would deal with desalinization and high technology is
already in the WRDA bill. That is a phony bill, and there is no
mandatory funding in it for those purposes. But what is mandatory is
that, regardless of the situation, water will be pumped away from the
salmon fisheries and toward big agribusiness. There are some who say:
Oh, why don't we do this? It will be worse next year. Really? The
agribusiness people have already said that this is just a start. So if
we allow this to go on without people paying attention, we are opening
up the door to more and more attacks.
Mr. President, I would like to discuss an editorial in the San Jose
Mercury News on December 8, 2016, titled, ``As Boxer retires, Feinstein
sells out the Delta.''
This editorial is very strong in favor of the salmon fisheries. They
say that this rider sells out to Central Valley water interests. It
guts environmental protections. We will have devastating long-term
effects on the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta ecosystem. They talk about
my stand on this, and they note that I will not be here, and that I am
taking a stand on this.
They call this rider, the one that takes the water away from the
salmon fisheries and gives it to agribusiness, an ``80-page document
negotiated behind closed doors [which] allows maximum pumping of water
from the Delta
[[Page S6948]]
to the Central Valley and eliminates''--I am going to talk about this--
``important congressional oversight over building dams.''
I am going to take a minute on this. I forgot to mention this. This
bill--this rider that was added is called the California drought bill.
It is way more than that; it is how to kill the salmon fisheries in the
west coast bill because it doesn't only kill them in California, it
kills them in Oregon and Washington. It kills thousands and thousands
of jobs. That is why we put in the Record all the people in the salmon
industry who oppose this rider.
It also says--and this is amazing--that in 11 Western States over the
next 5 years, the administration coming in will be able to
singlehandedly authorize the building of dams, which, as you know,
wreak havoc with the natural environment in our rivers and are very
expensive.
Congress has always been involved in the authorization of dams
because we hold hearings. We ask questions. Why should we do it? Why
shouldn't we do it? We bring together all the parties, and we make a
decision. This rider takes away the authority from Congress to
authorize dams in the 11 Western States.
So I say rhetorically to Mr. McCarthy: Do you really distrust your
colleagues so much that you no longer trust them to have anything to
say about whether a dam should be built or not? Do you really want to
take away the authority from your colleagues to call experts together
to ask why this dam is needed? What would the pluses be if this is
built? What would the minuses be? What would happen to wildlife? What
would happen to the environment if it is being built on an earthquake
fault? You may laugh at that, but there was a proposal in Northern
California to build enormous dams on earthquake faults. The only reason
it was stopped was congressional hearings.
Now President-Elect Trump will be able to determine in the 11 Western
States that have BLM land whether or not dams can be built, and
Congress will have no say.
But the answer to that is: Oh, but they still have to fund it. Well,
I have been in that dance before, and I know how that works. Allow just
a few dollars in it, and it is on the books. This bill is awful. It is
awful, and I am so grateful to these newspapers in California that have
called them out on it.
Mr. President, I have a Republican Senator complaining that I am
talking too long. What is the situation on the floor? Can Senators
speak as long as they wish?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There are no limitations.
Mrs. BOXER. So I will continue to speak, and when I am done, I am
done. It may be soon because I am getting a little tired, but I will
keep talking for a while. I say to everybody that I am sorry, but don't
drop a midnight rider on a beautiful bill that I worked on for 2 years
with my colleague Senator Inhofe, and then say: I am really annoyed
because she is talking too much.
I am sorry. I apologize, but I am going to talk until I am done, and
the Senator from Washington is going to talk until she is done.
Don't drop a midnight rider and destroy the fishing industry and say
that Congress will no longer have the ability to authorize the building
of dams.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, will the Senator from California yield
for a question?
Mrs. BOXER. Of course I will.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, to the Senator from California, I thank
her for being here in this discussion today about a very important
public policy issue.
It is December and most people know that high jinks happen in
December around here. People want to go home. People are doing last-
minute deals.
I don't know if the Senator from California knows, but the whole
deregulation of Enron and the energy markets--that whole thing was a
December midnight rider kind of activity.
All of these things happen because they know that Members want to go
home. They think it is the last deal and they can throw something in
and everybody will go along with it and blame it on, oh, I didn't read
the fine print.
There are a couple of things in here that I just wanted to ask the
Senator from California about. I am going to talk later. I wanted to
get over here and ask her because she is a knowledgeable person on
this.
First, this rider that was placed in the WRDA bill--is that in the
jurisdiction of your committee?
Mrs. BOXER. Absolutely not, my friend. As you know, it is in the
jurisdiction of your committee. It has absolutely nothing to do with
mine. I would say there are two pieces added that we have a little
jurisdiction on, funding for desal, but that is already in the base
WRDA bill. So I can honestly say to my friend that this is a horrible
rider in and of itself. One of the other problems with it is it has
gone through the wrong committee. That is right. It belongs in the
jurisdiction of the committee which is yours and Senator Murkowski's.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I would ask unanimous consent to have
printed in the Record an article from the San Francisco Chronicle that
says, ``Stop Feinstein's water-bill rider.'' This is a great article
about how it isn't the jurisdiction of this committee and how it is a
rider, which is one of the most objectionable parts for our colleagues
because regular order wasn't followed and it sets a bad precedent.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From San Francisco Chronicle, Dec. 7, 2016]
Stop Feinstein's Water-Bill Rider
(Editorial)
Sen. Dianne Feinstein calls her rider to a bipartisan water
appropriations bill a way to improve efficiencies and capture
more supply from ``wasted'' river flows for California
cities, agriculture and the environment. Sen. Barbara Boxer,
the author of the bill the rider amends, calls it a ``poison
pill'' and vows to filibuster it to death.
A more temperate read from President Obama's Department of
the Interior: Feinstein's drought rider would further
complicate already very, very complicated federal water
operations in California with no clear gains. The department,
and the White House, are opposed, and rightly so.
California's two senators, both Democrats, are expected to
battle it out in the Senate after the Water Resources
Development Act (S612) with Feinstein's California drought
rider sails through the House Thursday. The Senate fight may
be Boxer's last salvo before she retires, and it is unclear
she can marshal enough votes to block her own bill. The 700-
page bill authorizes funding for dozens of water
infrastructure projects around the country and emergency aid
for Flint, Mich., which has lead-contaminated water.
Feinstein defended her 90-page California drought
resolution as a needed defense against an anticipated
Republican effort to open up the Environmental Species Act
for major revisions next year. This might include allowing
water contractors to increase pumping to levels that would
benefit agriculture but devastate already threatened native
fish and essentially strip away hard-won protections for the
environment. She teamed up with House Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy, R-Bakersfield, to squeeze the package which
authorizes $558 million for desalination, water recycling,
and storage (both dams and groundwater) projects, into an
end-of-the year bill. ``If California is going to grow, we
must be able to provide prudent amounts of water to our
people, and we can't do that right now,'' she said in a
telephone interview.
Feinstein said she has drafted 28 versions during the three
years she has tried to pass such legislation.
But is the rider a shield against worse legislation action
or a blueprint to gut the Environmental Species Act? McCarthy
described the rider as a modest package of provisions to
ameliorate the effects of California's drought, now in its
sixth year.
Feinstein said the rider allows maximum diversions within
the legal protections of the Environmental Species Act and
the biological opinions (scientific findings) that guide
federal water policy. The environmental community and Boxer
see it as the first and immediate step of a larger plan to
divert more water to San Joaquin Valley farmers and Los
Angeles area water users.
Drought and warming temperatures, one of the effects of
climate change, are tipping off mass extinction of the
species in the San Francisco Bay and its estuary. We have to
work to share water among people, farms and the environment
of California--not try to benefit one interest with a
midnight rider.
Ms. CANTWELL. I would also like to ask the Senator from California if
she is aware that in this legislation there is also language--and I am
not sure this is in the jurisdiction of your committee either--giving
the ability to have dams built in 17 States without initial overview by
the U.S. Congress, without any other discussions. There would be
blanket authority given to
[[Page S6949]]
build dams in 17 States without the input of cities, counties,
constituents, interest groups, river constituents, fishermen.
We have several projects we have been discussing in the Pacific
Northwest that I have been involved with and have visited with many
people to talk about. People go methodically through these issues and
discuss them in a collaborative way because there are tradeoffs and
every community has a different opinion. So the notion that we would
forgo our own State's ability to raise questions here in the U.S.
Senate about somebody building a dam in our State--why would any Member
want to forgo their ability as a Member of the U.S. Senate or House of
Representatives to provide their input on a dam being built on a river
in their State? Is the Senator aware of this provision?
Mrs. BOXER. Senator, I was just talking about it briefly, and I
actually misstated it, so I am glad I was corrected. This rider,
dropped at midnight, going on a bill that is a beautiful bill that I
worked on for so long and that the Senator from Washington has worked
on--and there are a lot of wonderful things in there. This rider went
through the wrong committee. The issue you talk about, the ability of
the President of the United States to, by himself, authorize dams in
the Western States for the next 5 years anywhere in those States is
unheard of, and it is in your committee's jurisdiction. It is in the
jurisdiction of the Energy Committee. I hope Senator Murkowski is
outraged as well.
The fact is, the Senator is absolutely right. We have a Senator and a
Congressman getting together and saying that the Congress should be
bypassed and have no say in where dams should be put, whether dams
should be built at all, and it is in the jurisdiction of the Energy
Committee. It is not in the jurisdiction of Environment and Public
Works.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from California for
that explanation.
I also ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record another
San Francisco story from just yesterday where an attorney, Doug Obegi,
basically says, to my colleague's point about the midnight darkness of
this, that the densely technical text ``explicitly authorize[s] the
Trump administration to violate the biological opinions under the
Endangered Species Act.''
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
[From sfgate.com, Dec. 8, 2016]
House OKs Bill To Increase Pumping From State Rivers; Fish at Risk
(By Carolyn Lochhead)
Washington.--With the help of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-
Calif., House Republicans moved closer Thursday to achieving
their long-sought goal of undermining the Endangered Species
Act to deliver more water to California farmers, with the
overwhelming passage of a popular water infrastructure bill.
The bill, which moves to the Senate, contains a legislative
rider inserted by Feinstein and House Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy, R-Bakersfield, that would allow the incoming Trump
administration to increase pumping from the state's rivers by
overruling biological opinions from fish and wildlife
agencies that protect salmon, smelt and other native fish
that are nearing extinction for lack of flowing rivers.
The nearly 100-page rider, filled with dense, technical
language dictating operation of California's water system,
blindsided retiring Sen. Barbara Boxer, who plans a last-
ditch effort in the Senate to block the entire Water
Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act, which she co-
authored.
Boxer has rounded up support from Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-
Wash., and other West Coast senators but will need 41 votes
to prevent the bill from getting beyond the Senate.
Killing the popular infrastructure bill is an uphill climb,
but Boxer said the vote will be close.
On Thursday, the House passed the bill 360-61, with Bay
Area Democrats powerless to stop it. It authorizes billions
of dollars in water projects across the nation, including a
few for lead poisoning for the municipal water system in
Flint, Mich., and elsewhere. It also contains a raft of
California projects, including rebuilding levees to protect
Sacramento from flooding, restoring wetlands to reduce flood
risk around San Francisco Bay, and reducing pollution of Lake
Tahoe.
House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., specifically hailed the
rider for delivering ``much-needed water relief to
Californians.'' McCarthy said the rider would prevent water
front being ``sent out to sea'' by being left to flow in
rivers, and ``will increase pumping.''
Feinstein said she introduced the rider to forestall worse
legislation under the Trump administration. But McCarthy and
other San Joaquin Valley Republicans promised that more such
legislation can be expected next year, when it will no longer
face a veto from President Obama. President-elect Donald
Trump has promised to turn on the taps for the state's
farmers.
The rider came out of years of closed-door negotiations
between Feinstein and powerful San Joaquin Valley Republicans
to address California's five-year drought. These efforts have
repeatedly foundered over GOP insistence on weakening
protections for endangered salmon, smelt and other fish.
Feinstein and House Republicans insisted that the rider
does not violate the Endangered Species Act, because it
contains language saying that nothing within the legislation
shall violate existing environmental law.
But Boxer and Bay Area Democrats said that such general
clauses will not override the bill's direct authorizations
that mandate higher water deliveries.
``When an act of Congress specifically supersedes peer-
reviewed biological opinions that are the very mechanism of
how the Endangered Species Act gets implemented, that is a
grave undermining of the act,'' said Rep. Jared Huffman, D-
San Rafael.
Doug Obegi, a water lawyer with the Natural Resources
Defense Council, an environmental group, pointed to three
sections of densely technical text that he said ``explicitly
authorize the Trump administration to violate the biological
opinions under the Endangered Species Act.'' He said there is
no question that if the bill is enacted, ``it is going to be
headed to court. It is wholly inconsistent with state law.''
Ms. CANTWELL. So in the dark of night--I think that is the part where
the States are going to be told: You are just going to have to build a
dam. That is it. We decided.
Then everybody calls us and says: Wait a minute, wait a minute, I
don't want to dam the river or I want that stream to produce fish or I
want that to flow downstream for people further downstream, not right
here. All of that has basically now been given over to someone else.
I would also like to ask the Senator from California if she is aware
of provisions of the bill, as people are referring to it, that jilt the
taxpayers? I know there are a bunch of groups, Taxpayers for Common
Sense and even the Heritage Foundation--all of these people are
basically calling out the ridiculous spending aspect of this California
provision.
I wonder if the Senator from California is aware that this basically
authorizes prepayment on construction obligations that basically are
going to take millions of dollars out of the U.S. Treasury. Just by
passing this legislation, we would be taking money out of the Treasury,
resulting in basically $1.2 billion in receipts that we would have, but
giving us a loss of $807 million.
This is a provision in the bill that I think has had little
discussion, and this sweetheart deal for people is going to rip off the
taxpayers, in addition to all of this authorization that is in the
legislation.
Is my colleague from California aware of this provision?
Mrs. BOXER. I wish to say to my friend that I was aware of the
provision, but I did not know the details of what you just said. My
staff confirms that you are absolutely right. Are you saying to me that
water contractors will be relieved of certain payments and the Federal
Government will be on the hook--Federal taxpayers? Is that what you
were saying?
Ms. CANTWELL. What is happening here is that people who are under
current contracts on water payments, they would be given a sweetheart
deal in deduction of their interest, which would allow them to
shortchange our Treasury on revenues we are expecting.
That is a big discussion and if everybody wants to take that kind of
money out of the Treasury and basically give a sweetheart deal to
people, then we should have that discussion. We should have that
discussion and understand that this is what we are doing, bless that,
and hear from our appropriators that this is a worthy thing to do for
some reason. I can't imagine what that reason would be, given that we
are shortchanged here, and every day we are talking about how to make
ends meet with so little revenue. So I don't know why we would give a
bunch of contractors this ability to cost the Treasury so much money by
giving them a sweetheart deal. I will enter something into the Record
about this. As someone said, it would really cause very substantial
headaches for Treasury, OMB, and various agencies.
[[Page S6950]]
Again, I think, in the event of somebody thinking it is December and
people want to go home for the Christmas holidays, people aren't going
to read the details of this legislation. I hope our colleagues will
read this detail because I don't think we can afford to cost the
Treasury this much money.
Mr. President, I also ask my colleague from California: I assume you
have had a lot of discussion with our House colleagues about their
earmark rules. I think one of the reasons the WRDA bill is something
people support is that it is a list of projects that have been approved
by various agencies and organizations.
Mrs. BOXER. That is right.
Ms. CANTWELL. Has this project been approved by any of those agencies
or organizations?
Mrs. BOXER. Well, not only is it this whole notion of moving water
from one interest. I would call the salmon fishery a critical
interest--not only in my State. That is why I hate that it is called
the California drought. It impacts not only California's fishing
industry, but it impacts Washington's and Oregon's. This is why--save
one--all of our Senators on the west coast are strongly opposed to
this. Don't call it California water.
But the fact of the matter is that this has not been looked at in any
way. Whether it is the money, whether it is what it does to the
fishery, no one has really looked. There hasn't even been a hearing
about this specific bill. I know your committee has looked at a lot of
ways to help with the drought.
I compliment my friend from Washington, Senator Cantwell, and Senator
Murkowski. You have come up with real ways to work with every
stakeholder and not continue these absurd water wars where we take
money away from a fishing industry--that is a noble, historic fishing
industry and tens of thousands of fishermen who support their
families--and giving it over to big agribusiness. That is not the way
you want to approach the drought, I say to the Senator. It is not the
way I want to approach the drought.
I would never be party to picking a winner and a loser. That is not
our job. Our job is A, to make sure there are ways through technology
to get more water to the State that needs it--mostly California at this
point--and for all of us to work together to preserve that salmon
fishery. The salmon doesn't know when it is in California, when it is
in Washington, when it is in Oregon. Let's be clear. We need to protect
it.
I am just so grateful to you for being on this floor today because
your reasons for being here, first and foremost, are that you are
protecting jobs in your State. Second, you are protecting the
environment in your State. Third, you are protecting the rights of the
States, the tribes, and the municipalities to have something to say
over this. You are protecting the Endangered Species Act, which--as I
pointed out before you came--was signed by President Richard Nixon, for
God's sake. This is not a partisan thing. These are God's creatures. I
will quickly show you this and then take another question. I showed the
bald eagle and several other species. If there had been shenanigans
like this, Senator Cantwell--oh, well, we are not going to listen to
the science; we are just going to do what we want to do--we wouldn't
have the bald eagle. We wouldn't have these creatures I showed.
Senator, the fact is that what you are fighting for is not only your
State, not only for jobs, but you are fighting for the larger point--
that in the dead of night, you don't do a sneak attack on one of the
landmark laws that you and I so strongly support.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I wish to ask the Senator from
California--because there is another element she is alluding to--about
how to resolve water issues. While my understanding is your committee
is very involved in basically the Federal Government programs that help
communities around our country deal with water infrastructure and clean
water, the larger issues of how a community settles these disputes
about water on Federal land has really been the jurisdiction of the
Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
But my understanding is that this bill is also trying to weigh in on
disputes as it relates to the larger Colorado basin. I know my
colleague from Arizona is very concerned because his views weren't
heard. I know this is a big fight as a result of the language that is
in here on the southern part of our country, where there is also a
water dispute, and various States are debating this.
I remember when our former colleague Tom Daschle was here, and there
was a whole big fight on a river issue that the Upper Midwest was
concerned about. If my understanding is correct, basically what we are
trying to do in this legislation is, instead of having the
collaborative discussion among these various States to work together to
resolve it, they are basically saying: No, no, no, we can just put an
earmark rider in and instead make all the decisions for everybody and
choose winners and losers. So it is not just a Pacific Northwest
issue--of San Francisco, Oregon, and Washington--but also relates to
challenges we have on the Colorado River and challenges in the
southeast part of our country.
Basically, it sets up a discussion in the future of why would you
ever regionally get together to discuss anything if you could just jam
it through in the legislation by, basically--as our colleague Elizabeth
Warren said--putting a little cherry on top and getting people to say:
Oh, this must really be good. Then the consequences of this are that
the thorny, thorny issues of water collaboration aren't going to be
about the current rules of the road or collaboration. It is going to be
about earmarks and riders that Taxpayers for Common Sense, the Heritage
Foundation, and all of these people object to as the worst of the worst
of Congress.
Mrs. BOXER. Right. I would say this: I did hear, along with my
colleague, Elizabeth Warren describe it. She described it a little bit
like this. You take a beautiful bill like WRDA. For the most part, it
is not perfect, but it is a pretty darn good bill. Then you put a pile
of dirt on top of it, which I call the McCarthy rider, and then you
stick a little Maraschino cherry on top, which is Flint, and a couple
of other good things, and you say: OK, eat the dirt. That is another
way of explaining it.
My friend is right. What is the message if we don't fight this darn
thing, perhaps defeat it, and get it stripped out. We have an amendment
to strip it out if we could get to it.
What we are essentially saying to all the people, the stakeholders in
the water wars, is this: You know, what is important is to your clout.
Give enough money to this person, agribusiness and maybe you can
control him, or give enough money to this person and maybe you control
her.
The bottom line is we need to bring everybody to the table because my
friend and I understand a couple of things. The water wars are not
going to be solved unless everyone buys in. There are ways we can do
this. We have done this work before. We can reach agreement, because if
we don't, what happens? Lawsuits. Let me just be clear. There are going
to be lawsuits and lawsuits and lawsuits because this is a clear
violation of the Endangered Species Act. Some colleagues say: Oh, no,
it isn't. It says in there it is not.
Well, very good, let's say we loaded a weapon and we dropped it on
another country, and they said: This is war; you just dropped a bomb on
us. We said: No, it isn't. We said we weren't declaring war on you. It
is the action that counts, not what you say. A rose is a rose, as
William Shakespeare once said--call it any other name.
This is an earmark. This is wrong. This is painful. This violates the
Endangered Species Act. This is going to lead to the courthouse door.
That is why my friend and I are not very popular right now around this
joint because we are standing here and people want to go home. They are
annoyed. Why is she still talking?
Well, I am still talking. I don't want to.
I say to my colleague, I ask her a question on my time, which is
this: Does she think it is really painful for me to have to filibuster
my own bill?
Ms. CANTWELL. I thank you for your steadfast leadership in the
Senate. As to the fact that you are retiring, you are certainly going
to be missed. I am sure you would like to have legislation on the water
resources pass. I think you brought up a very important point: Strip
out language for which there is bipartisan support asking for it to be
stripped out. And there
[[Page S6951]]
is bipartisan support asking for it to be stripped out because people
with true water interests have not been allowed to have their say.
We could get this done today--be done with this and be on our way.
I think, for our colleagues who want us to be done, there is an easy
path forward--a very easy path. Just strip out the language on
California and send it back.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, since we are kind of reversing things, I
ask unanimous consent that my friend control the time right now.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. BARRASSO. I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mrs. BOXER. OK, I will just hold the floor forever. That is fine.
I say to my friend, you have been through these kinds of wars before
when you were standing alone trying to stop drilling in the Arctic. I
remember all of our colleagues saying: Oh, my God, this is terrible.
This drilling in the Arctic is on the military bill. Imagine--drilling
in the Arctic. They put it on the national defense bill.
My friend was approached, and she was told: Senator, you are going to
bring down the entire defense of this country if you don't back off.
My friend said: I don't think so. All you have to do is strip this
Arctic rider, and we are done.
Am I right in my recollection of that?
Ms. CANTWELL. The Senator is correct. It was December and the same
kind of scenario. Basically, jamming something onto a must-pass bill
was a way that somebody thought this body would just roll over. In the
end we didn't. We sent it back to the House, and the Defense bill was
passed in very short order.
In fact, it is the exact same scenario. The House had already gone
home, and I think they basically opened up for business again and
passed it with two people in the Chamber. So it can be done. It has
been done. If people want to resolve this issue and go home, then strip
out this earmark rider language and we can be done with it and we can
have the WRDA bill and we can be done.
So I think that what my colleague is suggesting--because it isn't
really even the authority of the WRDA committee--is that she probably
would be glad to get language that is not her jurisdiction off of this
bill and communicate to our House colleagues that this is the approach
that we should be taking.
So I would like to ask through the Chair if, in fact, the Senator
from California understands that that kind of approach on earmarks is
something that she has heard a lot about from our House colleagues,
about how opposed they are.
Mrs. BOXER. Yes, I have. I wish to say, since our friend is here--I
am not doing anything, an attack on anything, and I never would. It is
not my way.
I am going to ask unanimous consent right now, Senator Cantwell,
without losing my right to the floor and making sure I get the floor
back; is that correct? After I make a unanimous consent request, I
assume I would still have the floor under the rules.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. It depends on what the unanimous consent
request is.
Mrs. BOXER. The request would be to strip the rider out. My
colleagues look perplexed. We have been talking about a 98-page rider
that was added to the WRDA bill, and we have filed an amendment to do
that.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. It is not in order.
Mrs. BOXER. Excuse me?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. This request is not in order.
Mrs. BOXER. A unanimous consent request is not in order?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. It is not in order to strip out House language
by unanimous consent.
Mrs. BOXER. Then I would ask through the Chair, what would the
appropriate language be to get unanimous consent? Is it to allow an
amendment to do that? Would that be the right way to go?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. A motion to concur with an amendment.
Mrs. BOXER. So we could ask for that by unanimous consent--to have
such an amendment, and I want to make sure that after I make that, I
would not lose the right to the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. That is correct.
Mrs. BOXER. Thank you.
Unanimous Consent Request
So on behalf of my friend from Washington and myself, I ask unanimous
consent that we be allowed to offer an amendment to strip a rider that
was placed on the bill by Kevin McCarthy in the House, and it is 98
pages, and it is in the House bill. It is called the California draft
provision. I ask unanimous consent that we be allowed to have an
amendment to strip out that language.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mrs. BOXER. That was a good test.
We can see where this is coming from, I say to my friend from
Washington. All we are asking for is to go back to a bill that we
worked on for almost 2 years, and now we are looking at a situation
where we will be harmed in many ways by this rider.
When I say ``we,'' I mean our States. We have thousands of salmon
fishery jobs that will be lost. We have a frontal attack on the
Endangered Species Act, which has been called out by every major
environmental group in the country. We have letters from every salmon
fishery organization saying that this is dangerous. Yet all we are
asking for is a simple amendment to strip out a midnight rider, and the
Republicans object.
In that rider, it takes away the right of Congress to approve dams.
So whether it is in Colorado or Wyoming or California or Washington or
Oregon or Montana--and there are many other Western States--the
President-elect will have the right to determine where to put a dam. He
will have the ability, for the first time in history, to authorize the
building of dams. And the answer comes back from those who support the
rider: But Congress has to appropriate.
Well, we know where that goes. I have been here a long time. All you
need is a little appropriation every year, and the deal continues.
So we have a circumstance on our hands. I know people in the Senate
are really mad at me right now. What a perfect way for me to go out. I
was a pain in the neck when I came, and I am a pain in the neck when I
go.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I have a question for the Senator from
California.
The irony of this situation--first of all, I appreciate the Senator
from California, because she is such a stalwart in so many different
ways on so many different issues. What people may not know about the
colleague we love dearly is that she is greatly theatrical. She has a
beautiful voice. She writes music. She obviously lives in L.A. and
probably hobnobs with all sorts of people in the entertainment
industry. She sang beautifully the other night at our goodbye dinner
for the retiring Members.
This reminds me of that movie ``Chinatown.'' There was a famous movie
that Jack Nicholson was in that was all about the corruption behind
water----
Mrs. BOXER. And Faye Dunaway, just so you know.
Ms. CANTWELL. Yes, and Faye Dunaway. So Jack Nicholson and Faye
Dunaway did a movie a long time ago about the water wars in California;
am I correct?
Mrs. BOXER. Yes.
Ms. CANTWELL. So it was a movie about the fight between Southern and
Northern California about who gets water, and then people found out
that there was so much corruption behind the deal that basically people
were trying to do a fast one.
So the subject, if I am correct--that is what the subject of the
movie is about. This is not a new subject; it is a very old subject.
The question is, are people trying to supersede a due process here that
consumers--in fact, I would ask--I hope the ratepayers and constituents
of the utilities in Los Angeles would be asking the utility: What are
they doing lobbying against the Endangered Species Act? My guess is
there are a lot of people in Southern California that have no idea that
a utility would lobby, spend their public
[[Page S6952]]
dollars lobbying against a Federal statute by undermining it with a
rider in the dark of night.
But I wanted to ask my colleague: This issue is a historic issue in
California, correct? And when it is done in the dark of night, as that
movie depicts, what happens is that the issues of public interests are
ignored and consequently people are shortchanged. Is that the Senator's
understanding?
Mrs. BOXER. Yes. I wish to yield my time to my friend. But here is
what I am going to say right now. The Senator from Washington is
absolutely right that this issue has been around California for a very
long time. So I will yield my time to the Senator from Washington--I
yield for a question. I can't yield the full time; I can yield for a
question.
But the answer to the other question is of course the Senator is
right. She talks about the movie ``Chinatown.'' Do you know what year?
I think it was the 1980s, a long time ago. I remember it well. It was
about the water wars, and it resulted in people dying. It was
corruption. It was about who gets the water rights.
Here is the deal: Here we have our beautiful State and, as my friend
knows, because of the miracle of nature, Northern California gets the
water; Southern California--it has been called a desert. So we have
always had a problem.
When I came to the Senate, we had 18 million people, and now we have
40 million people. So we have urban users, suburban users, rural users,
farmers, and fishermen. We have to learn to work together. Do we do
that? Not the way Kevin McCarthy did it, which is a grab for big
agriculture, which destroys the salmon fishery and is going to bring
pain on the people who drink the water from the delta because it is
going to have a huge salt content that has to be taken out before they
can drink it. So this is the opposite of what ought to happen.
I yield back to my friend for another question.
Ms. CANTWELL. On that point, in the process for discussing these
water agreements, the Senator from California is saying they don't
belong in her committee, and they have been controversial over a long
period of time, and the best way to do this is not through an earmark,
which this is--the notion that the House of Representatives is jamming
the U.S. Senate on a half-billion-dollar earmark is just amazing to me
because of the water agreements that people have negotiated and that
have passed through these committees and that have been agreed to. They
are not letting those go, but they are letting this particular earmark
go, and sending this over. But the normal process would be for these
Federal agencies and communities to work together on a resolution, and
then if resources were asked for, they would come through, I believe,
the Energy and Natural Resources Committee for authorization because we
are the ones who deal with the Bureau of Reclamation and the public
land issues. Is that the understanding of the Senator from California
as well?
Mrs. BOXER. Absolutely. What is such a joke is that my Republican
friends, who were just objecting to our having an amendment to take
this earmark off, always give big speeches about how Congress is
putting all of these earmarks in. Well, this is a clear earmark because
it is directing a project to run in a certain way and diverting water
to a special interest and taking it away from the fishery. Therefore,
by its very nature, it is giving a gift of water to big agribusiness
and letting the salmon fishery just go under.
I would say to my friend that the reason she is down here is that
this is not just about California. The provision is called California
drought. It is not about the drought. It doesn't cure the drought.
Yes, my friend is right. Every provision, including the one about
giving President-Elect Trump the right to decide where a dam will be
built and taking it away from Congress, that all belongs in the
jurisdiction of the Senator's committee. I am surprised Senator
Murkowski isn't here because this is a direct run at her as well as the
Senator from Washington.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I would ask the Senator from California
then, the question is on this process of deciding the authorization. I
notice we had a few colleagues here who were--I don't know if they were
coming to speak--but in the Senator's region, there is a lot of
discussion among the Western States on how to balance issues on water;
is that correct? There are a lot of meetings and discussions?
Mrs. BOXER. Well, we have no choice, because, as the Senator from
Washington knows, my State gets a lot of water out of the Colorado
River. It is under a lot of stress. We have a lot of problems. My heart
goes out to every single stakeholder in my State. That is why I am so
chagrined at this, because we all have to work together, I say to my
friend, in our State.
We are all suffering because we don't have the water we need. But the
way to deal with it is not to slam one complete industry called the
salmon fishery, which not only impacts my State but the Senator's State
of Washington and Oregon was well.
Ms. CANTWELL. I have a question for the Senator from California
because some of our colleagues that were here--my understanding is if
you can get water from Northern California by just agreeing to kill
fish and not meeting those obligations, then Southern California can
take some of that water as well. Then, the consequence is these Western
States, which might be supporting this bill, have less obligation to
make more conservation efforts.
So, in reality, if you are talking about the Colorado River and all
the various resources that have to be negotiated, if somebody can be
let off the hook because you are just going to kill fish instead, then
you have more water. Sure, if you just want to kill fish in streams and
give all the money to farmers, of course you have more water. Then, no
one in the Colorado discussion has to keep talking about what are we
going to do about drought.
I think the Senator from California is going to tell me that drought
is not going away; it is a growing issue of concern, and so we actually
need more people to discuss this in a collaborative way than in an end-
run way.
Am I correct about the partners and all of that discussion?
Mrs. BOXER. My friend is very knowledgeable and very smart. People
tend to look at a provision, I say to my friend, in a very narrow way.
They say: Oh, what is the difference? It doesn't matter. But my friend
is right on the bigger picture. If all the fishery dies and all of the
jobs with the fishery die and there is no demand for the water for the
fish anymore, my friend is right. That relieves the discussion.
So, yes, you know what it reminds me of, I say to my friend. I don't
know if she agrees with this analogy. But I remember once when they
said: Let's raise the retirement age for social security because people
are working longer and it will help the Social Security trust fund.
Well, if you take that, my friend, to the ultimate, why don't we say
people should work until they are 90? Then there won't be any Social
Security problem because everyone will die before it kicks in. It is
the same analogy here: You kill off all the fish and the entire salmon
fishery, then all you have is agriculture demanding water, and then
they will try to step on the urban users and suburban users and the
rural users and say: We are the only thing that matters. And they are
already using, under most analyses, 80 percent of the water in my
State.
So you are right. You kill off the fishery, then that is one less
stakeholder to care about. You tell people ``Don't retire until you are
90,'' the Social Security trust fund will be very vibrant.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, as the Senator from California knows,
one of the States concerned about this is Arizona because they have
kind of been left out of that discussion. It also says to people: You
don't have to have these discussions amongst everybody together; you
can just write it into law. My understanding is that our colleagues
from Florida and Alabama also have a similar concern. People are trying
to use the legislative process to unbalance the negotiations so they
can legislate instead of negotiate. Not only are they trying to
legislate instead of negotiate, they are trying to use earmarks to do
it and overrule existing law.
So am I correct, to the Senator from California--are we going to get
anywhere with getting California more
[[Page S6953]]
water if, in fact, this ends up in courts and it is stayed, and you
really won't get any water in the next few years?
I should make a footnote for my colleague from California. Thank you
for your compliment.
I had to chair a 3-hour hearing once on the San Joaquin River
settlement. It was about 18 years of dispute on what to do about the
San Joaquin water. Because of that, I learned a lot about the fights in
California and all of the problems that California had then. This was
at the time my colleague Tim Johnson was the chair of that subcommittee
and had been stricken ill, and they asked me if I could step in. I had
no idea I was going to spend 3 hours hearing about 18 years of
litigation. That is right--18 years of litigation on the San Joaquin
River. Basically, people came to that hearing that day--which is now
probably 10 years ago--to tell me it was not worth the 18 years of
litigation. They had determined that while they could sue each other
all they wanted, that getting to a resolution about how to move forward
on water had to be a much more collaborative solution to the process.
Secondly, I would mention to my colleague from California and see if
she knows about this--the same happened on the Klamath Basin, which is
legislation we passed out of committee and tried to pass here. The
Klamath Basin basically said: Let's negotiate.
The various people in that dispute had a dispute and actually went to
court, and the regional tribe won in the court and basically didn't
have to do anything more on water issues but decided that, in the good
interest of trying to have a resolution, it was a good idea to come to
the table and try this collaborative approach.
I was mentioning my time chairing a 3-hour hearing on the San Joaquin
River settlement that people had come to after 18 years of fighting
each other in court. They came and they said: Oh, we have a settlement.
The point was, we tried to litigate and sue each other for 18 years and
we didn't get anywhere, and now we have a settlement and we would like
to move forward.
My point is, the best way for us to move forward on water issues is
to have everybody at the table and come to agreements because there are
a lot of things you can do in the near term while you are working on
water in a more aggressive fashion to get to some of the thornier
issues. But if you basically try to litigate and legislate instead of
negotiate, you end up oftentimes just getting litigation, like what
happened with the San Joaquin. So you never get a solution and people
don't have the water. You end up not having a resolution, and the whole
point is to get people water.
So does the Senator think that is where we are headed if we end up
just trying to tell people: You can legislate.
Well, it sounds interesting, and if you get somebody to write an
earmark for you, you are in good shape, I guess, if you can get that
out of the House of Representatives. But in reality, you are not in
good shape if you don't actually get water because you end up in a
lawsuit for so many years, like San Joaquin.
Is that where we are going to head on this?
Mrs. BOXER. I say to my friend, she is so smart on this. Of course
that is where we are headed. And I encourage this. If this happens and
the Senator and I are not successful and this winds up to be the law of
the land--a provision added in the dead of night that forces water to
be operated in a certain way that violates the biological opinions on
fish, that violates the science--I hope they take this to court day
one. I don't care; say whatever you want: Oh, this isn't a violation of
the Endangered Species Act. Really? Clearly it is.
The Senator is absolutely right. Eighteen years in court over an
agreement. That is another reason I am totally stunned at this. But I
think it is about what my friend said--who has the most juice, who has
the most power to sit down and get someone who is a Senator or a Member
of the House to add language? It is a nightmare.
The reason we have been obstreperous, the reason we are standing on
our feet, the reason we didn't yield to other people is we are trying
to make a simple point. The Senator shows it with her chart.
For all the people who said we shouldn't do earmarks, this is such an
incredible earmark, it actually tells the Federal Government how to
operate a water project--it is extraordinary--and to walk away from a
biological opinion from the science. Of course it is going to wind up
in court. I hope it does. What I would rather do is beat it. What I
would rather do is get it out because it is only, as my friend said,
going to encourage more similar types of legislating, where people have
the power and the money and the ear of a Senator to call up and say:
You know what. I am having trouble in my agribusiness. I need more
water.
It is ridiculous. We are all suffering in this drought, I say to my
friend. California is in a drought. There is a lot of rain coming down
in the north, very little in the south, and I pray to God it continues.
I do. We have been getting a lot of rain so far, but I don't trust it
at all.
There are two ways to meet this challenge. One way is to figure out a
way to get more water to everyone. That means taking the salt out of
water--and we do it. I have toured the desal plants, and it is very
encouraging. One way is to take the salt out or put more water in the
system. Another way is to recycle. Another way is conservation. Another
way is water recharging. We know how to do it. The Senator is an
expert. All of this is in her committee, which was bypassed.
The other way to do is the wrong way to do it, which is take the side
of one business group--agribusiness--versus a salmon fishery and
destroy the salmon fishery. Then, as my friend points out, in years to
come: Well, isn't that a shame? There are no more salmon fisheries, so
we get all the water. In the meantime, we are eating farmed salmon, and
all these people are out of work and their families are devastated
after a way of life they have had for a very long time.
So my friend is very prescient on the point, and she talks about the
reality. We are here. We are not dreamers. We are realists. We know
what happens in the water wars.
I continue to yield to my friend.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I would ask my colleague--again, I don't
think this is in the jurisdiction of her committee. That is why I am
asking--if we did want to pursue with the Bureau of Reclamation the
notion that we should do more underground water storage, again, that
would be something we would authorize. That is what I want to ask the
Senator, if that is, in fact, the case.
My understanding--because we have to deal with this so much in the
Pacific Northwest. We are a hydro State which has affordable
electricity, but we get it out of a snowpack that comes in the
wintertime. Now that the climate is changing and it is getting warmer,
we don't have a large snowpack, so one of the ways to store that
snowpack--which would be great to do--would be to have underground
aquifer storage. I think that is an idea Stanford University has signed
off on. They basically signed off on it because they said it was the
most cost-effective thing for the taxpayer and had the most immediate
impact.
What the Senator was just saying about rain--if you get a lot of rain
right now--because it is not snowpack. If it is rain, store it, just
like we were storing the snowpack, but now store it in aquifers
underground, and that would then give us the ability to have more
water. Stanford is like: Yes, yes, yes, this is the best thing to do.
And this is what I think your State is trying to pursue.
In that regard, I don't even think that is the jurisdiction of the
Senator's committee, if I am correct, but is that an idea that you and
California would pursue as a way to immediately, in the next few years,
start a process for getting water to the Central Valley and to various
parts of California?
Mrs. BOXER. Without a doubt. My friend is right. It is not like we
are dealing with a subject matter that has no solutions, and science
has shown us the various ways to do it. Certainly underground storage
is fantastic, recharging. There are all these things we know--
recycling, conservation, and desal. These are just some thoughts.
My friend is right: The jurisdiction is mostly in her committee. We
may have a few things to do. Wonderful. But that is not the important
point. To me, the important point is here we have--and I am going to
sum it up and then I will
[[Page S6954]]
yield the floor and hope my friend will take the floor because I need
to run and do 17 things, and then I will be back.
Here is the situation. We have a Water Resources Development Act
bill. It passed here with 95 votes. Nothing passes here with 95 votes,
even saying ``Happy Mother's Day.'' It is a beautiful bill, my friend.
Is it perfect? No. But it was very good. For my State, for the
Senator's State, it was very good. Now, it is moving through the House,
and in the middle of the night, without anyone even seeing it, this
horrible poison pill amendment is added which essentially is a frontal
attack on the salmon fishery and all the people who work in it not only
in my State, but in the Senator's State and Oregon. So all of the
Senators, save one, are apoplectic about what it means to jobs and what
it means to tradition and what it means to have wild salmon. It is very
important. So it is a frontal assault on the industry; it is a frontal
assault on the ESA; and it is a frontal assault on the notion that
there are no more earmarks.
Then it has another provision cutting the Congress out of authorizing
new dams in all of the Western States for the next 5 years. This is
dropped from the ceiling into the WRDA bill.
Now, I stand as one of the two people who did the most work on that
bill saying vote no. It is very difficult for me. But I think it is
absolutely a horrible process, a horrible rider. It is going to result
in pain and suffering among our fishing families.
With that, I thank my friend, and I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
Ms. CANTWELL. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from California for
her steadfast support of doing the right things on clean water and
clean air and for focusing on this issue for her State because
ultimately she wants water for her State. She knows litigation is not
the route to get it. She knows that there are things we can be doing
here but that we have to get people to support that. So I thank her for
her obligation to making sure her constituents get real results.
This rider is a giveaway to projects that are basically described as
deadbeat dams, projects in California that are opposed by tribes and
fishermen and sportsmen and environmental communities. Basically, it
writes a blank check to them, allowing millions of taxpayer dollars to
be used to construct dams throughout the West without any further
congressional approval.
That, in and of itself, should cause our colleagues to pause. You are
going to go home and have to tell your constituents all of a sudden
that someone is building a dam on a beautiful river in your State and
you can't do anything about it. I would hope our colleagues in those 17
Western States that would be impacted by this would do something to
help tell our colleagues to strip out this controversial provision and
send it back to the House in a clean bill.
In addition, as I mentioned, section 4007 authorizes the Secretary to
pay up to one-quarter of the cost of State water storage in any of
these 17 reclamation States. The Secretary would have to notify
Congress within 30 days after deciding to participate.
These issues on our process are going to make it much harder for us
in the future to not have the taxpayers paying for projects that are
nothing but further litigation in the process. Why is collaboration so
important? Collaboration is important because these are thorny issues.
There are lots of different national interests at stake and a lot of
local interest and a lot of jobs. My colleague from California,
probably not in the last hour that we have been discussing this but
probably earlier in the afternoon, mentioned the huge amount of Pacific
West Coast fisheries that are also opposed to this bill, and Trout
Unlimited which is opposed to this legislation, and various fishing
groups and organizations because fishermen want to have rivers that are
functioning with clean water and enough stream flow for fish to
migrate.
The fishing economy in the Northwest, I can easily say, is worth
billions. Anybody who knows anything about the Pacific Northwest--
whether you are in Oregon or in Washington, maybe even Alaska--the
pride of our region is the Pacific Coast salmon. The Pacific Coast
salmon is about having the ability to have good, healthy rivers and
stream flow. For us in the Northwest, this is an issue I can easily say
we have at least 100 Ph.D.s on; that is to say, the subject is so
knowledgeable, so formulated, so battled over, so balanced that it
would be like having 100 Ph.D.s in the subject. That is because we have
a huge Columbia River basin, and because the Columbia River basin has
many tributaries and because the salmon is such an icon, it needs that
basin.
We also have a hydrosystem, and we also have an incredible
agriculture business in our State. I think we are up to something
like--when you take varieties of agricultural products, something like
70 different agricultural products--we, too, have to balance fish,
farming, fishermen, and tribes, the whole issues of our environment and
recreation and the need for hydro, and balance that all out. We have to
do that practically every single day.
It has been these kinds of decisions that have taught us as a region
and a State that by collaboration, we can get results and move forward.
I and one of my colleagues in the House who was the former leader on
the Committee on Natural Resources, Doc Hastings, probably now more
than 10-plus years ago, had regional discussions with then-Secretary of
the Interior Salazar who came to the Northwest, and we sat down and we
asked: What do we do about the Yakima Basin?
It was Sunday morning, and you would think that everybody getting
together on Sunday morning, is it that important? Well, it was. There
were probably 50 or 60 different interests meeting with us--the Bureau
of Rec, the Secretary of the Interior, Congressman Hastings, me, and
many other interests, and we talked about what do we want to do with
the Yakima Basin.
There has been great pride that I have had to offer legislation,
along with my colleague Senator Murray, on how to move the Yakima Basin
project forward in the U.S. Senate. I say with ``pride'' because it was
a collaborative effort. These are people who do not agree with each
other, who have fought each other, who basically probably disagree on
the most essential elements of their viewpoint, and yet reached
consensus--delighted in their resolve--and came forward with
legislation to say this is how you should deal with our water problems
in a drought when your State has both farming and fishing needs.
Our Governor got behind it, Governor Inslee. Other people got behind
it. I have been at several forums. National organizations, California
institutions are holding up the Yakima deal as the example of how water
management should be done in the future. Why? Because it was holistic.
That means it included everything on the table. It was a regional
approach and everybody came to the table, and because it didn't try to
solve every single problem up front but came to what we could agree to
today and move forward--because it would claim some water that we need
now.
The fact that the Yakima project became such a milestone, our
colleagues in Klamath, OR, did the same things: They worked together in
a collaborative fashion and tried to discuss these issues. I would say,
for the most part, all of these issues have been, with these
discussions in the past that our colleagues bring legislation to the
U.S. Senate, very rarely has somebody brought language without
everybody locally working together and agreeing.
I don't know of times when my colleagues have brought legislation
where they are basically just trying to stick it to one State or the
other--except for now, this seems to be the norm. This seems to be what
we are being encouraged to do today. The California project is one in
which we wish that they would seek the same kind of collaborative
approach to dealing with both fishermen, whose economy is immensely
important in California, and farmers who also are important but should
not have the ability to supersede these laws that are already on the
books.
What they should do is learn from the San Joaquin River proposal. You
can battle this for 18 years or you can resolve these differences and
move forward. When you can write an earmark and send it over here as a
poison pill on a bill, you are hoping that you don't have to sit down
at the table and work in a constructive fashion.
[[Page S6955]]
It is very disappointing to me that some of the partners in this
deal, as we put ideas on the table to give 300,000 acre-feet to the
farmers in the Westlands region over the next 2 years, give them
300,000 acre-feet of water over the next 2 years while we are working
with them on an aquifer recharge. Their answer back to us was: We want
to play our hand here and see if we can jam this through first.
Basically, they don't want to work in a collaborative fashion. They
don't want to work with the region to find solutions. They want to
legislate something that will lead to litigation. Litigation is not
going to lead to more water, it is going to lead to longer delays in
getting water to everybody who needs it.
I wouldn't be out here spending this much time with our colleagues if
it wasn't for the fact that this issue is just at its beginning.
Drought has already cost our Nation billions of dollars, and it is
going to cost us more; that is, drought is causing great issues with
water, fish, and farming. It is also causing problems with fire. It is
making our forests more vulnerable to the type of explosive fires that
we have seen in the Pacific Northwest that wiped across 100,000 acres
of forest land in just 4 hours. Those are the kind of things that hot
and dry weather can do.
Our colleagues need to come together on what would be the process for
us dealing with drought. The fact that California has been the tip of
the spear is just that; it is just the tip of the spear. Everybody else
is going to be dealing with this in Western States. My colleagues who
represent hot and dry States already know. They have had to deal with
this from a collaborative process.
I hope our colleagues who care greatly about the fact that drought is
going to be a persistent problem for the future would come together
with us and say: We can get out of town tonight. We can get out of town
in the next few hours. All you have to do is accept our offer to strip
this poison pill earmark, which is costing taxpayers one-half billion
dollars, off the WRDA bill because it is not even part of the WRDA
jurisdiction and send back a clean WRDA bill to the House of
Representatives.
That is what my colleagues on the other side of the aisle want, and
that is what we want. The only people who are holding this place up are
the people who want to jam somebody in December at the end of a session
because it is the way to get poison pill ideas done.
People are taking note. I know the San Francisco Chronicle had a
story about the House OKs a bill to increase pumping from our rivers
and putting fish at risk. There was a quote about undermining the
Endangered Species Act.
There was an editorial as well, I believe, from the same newspaper. I
don't know that we have a quote from the editorial here, but I think I
submitted that earlier for the Record. It basically said: Stop the
Feinstein water bill rider. It basically said that we have to work to
share water among people, farmers, and the environment, not try to
benefit one interest over the other with a midnight rider.
The press is watching. I think there was a story today in the San
Jose newspaper as well. I don't know if I have that with me, but we
will enter that later into the Record. Having other newspapers in
California write editorials on this is most helpful because it is
bringing to light the kinds of things that are happening in the U.S.
Senate that people all throughout the West need to pay attention to.
We wish that drought could be solved so easily by just giving one
interest more resources over the other, but that is not the way we are
going to deal with this. If we have colleagues in the House who would
rather steal water from fish than fund aquifer recharge, then we should
have that debate in the U.S. Senate in the committee of jurisdiction or
even here on the floor as it relates to whose jurisdiction and funding
it really is. To stick the taxpayer with the bill of paying for dams in
17 States without any further discussion by our colleagues is certainly
putting the taxpayers at risk, and that is why taxpayer organizations
have opposed this legislation.
If we want to get this done and if we want to get out of here, let's
strip this language off and let's be done with it and send to our
colleagues a clean WRDA bill and be able to say to people that we did
something for water this year, but we didn't kill fish in the process
of doing it.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
Montenegro Membership Into NATO
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, we have been running the hotline on the
accession of Montenegro as a member of the NATO alliance. As a member
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the Presiding Officer knows
we have held extensive discussions and hearings on NATO and the
accession of Montenegro as a member into the NATO alliance.
Quite frankly, this is a very important matter for us to try to
complete before we adjourn this session of Congress, and let me say
why. Montenegro has taken all of the necessary steps in order to be in
full compliance for joining the alliance of NATO. We have very
carefully reviewed their commitment in regard to their military,
defense budgets, institutional changes they have made, their
willingness to take on the responsibilities as a full NATO partner, and
quite frankly, they have endured outside interference which has tried
to compromise their ability to complete the process.
What do I mean by that? Montenegro recently had parliamentary
elections, and Russia tried to interfere with the parliamentary
elections to try to instill some instability in that country as an
effort to influence not only Montenegro but the international
community's--the members of NATO--interest in completing the approval
of NATO. Every member state of the alliance must approve any new member
and requires votes in all states. Several have already voted to approve
the accession of Montenegro into the alliance.
The reason I say this is extremely important to get done now is
because Russia does not hold a veto on the accession of new countries
and new states into the NATO alliance. They have done everything they
could to try to interfere with this process.
I think the clear message is that the Senate is not going to be
intimidated by Russia and that we are going to stand by this alliance.
We have a chance to do that within the next, I hope, few hours before
the Congress completes its work.
I really wanted to underscore the importance of us taking action on
the Montenegro issue. The Ambassador to Montenegro has attended our
committee meetings frequently and kept us informed on everything that
has taken place.
I had a chance to meet with many of our partner states in regard to
Montenegro. Many of these countries have already taken action, but
quite frankly, it is U.S. action that will be the most significant.
It is important that we speak with a very strong voice. If we don't
get it done now, it will not be allowed to come up until the next
Congress, and we have a new administration coming in on January 20. I
think it is important that we complete this process now. It is strongly
supported by the administration and by the Democrats and Republicans.
The recommendation passed our committee with unanimous support.
I thank Chairman Corker for handling this matter in a very
expeditious and thorough way. We didn't shortcut anything. We have gone
through the full process. It is now time for us to act. If we want to
send a clear message that Russia cannot intimidate the actions of the
Senate or our partners, then I think the clearest way we can send that
message is to vote and make sure we complete action on the accession of
Montenegro before Congress adjourns sine die.
I think it is pretty much clear that both the Democratic and
Republican hotlines--there have not been any specific objections I am
aware of that have been raised by any Member of the U.S. Senate to
taking final action on this issue. I know we have other issues
interfering with the consideration of some bills. I urge everyone to
resolve those issues so this very important matter can be completed.
As the ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee,
and again working with Chairman Corker, I can tell you this is a very
important step for us to take in this Congress,
[[Page S6956]]
and I urge our colleagues to figure out a way that we can bring this to
conclusion before Congress adjourns.
As I said, I come to the floor to speak in support of the Senate
providing its advice and consent to the Protocol to the North Atlantic
Treaty of 1949 on the accession of Montenegro.
I have been a strong supporter of Montenegro's bid to join NATO. It
will enhance our security. It will strengthen the alliance. And it will
send a strong message of resolve to Russia as it invades its neighbors
and seeks to upend the international order. Montenegro may be a small
country, but its inclusion in NATO will have positive repercussions
across the continent and will send an important message of hope to
other aspirant countries.
Republicans need to take the modest steps my colleagues, including
Senator Manchin of West Virginia and Senator Brown of Ohio, are asking
for to take proper care of coal miners and their families in this
country. And then we need to move on the Montenegro NATO resolution--
today. I am pleased to say that no one in the Democratic caucus has
expressed any concern to me about this resolution, and they are ready
to pass it once our coal miners are taken care of.
I stand here today in support of NATO enlargement. The Senate Foreign
Relations Committee recently voted by voice vote in support of this
bid--unanimously with Republican and Democratic support. And so even if
Republicans don't take care of our miners today, and as a result we
cannot pass this resolution, I fully expect my colleagues across the
aisle, and the President, to fully support this effort in early
January. We can get this done. We must get it done.
So what is the case for Montenegro's membership?
Admission of Montenegro would mark another important step towards
fully integrating the Balkans into international institutions which
have helped to contribute to peace and stability over the years in
Europe. Croatia and Albania joined the alliance in 2009 and have been
valuable contributors to accomplishing NATO objectives since then, and
I hope that Montenegro's admission will help to motivate the reforms
necessary in other Balkan countries to join.
Montenegro has made outsized contributions to NATO missions despite
not being a full member. I understand that in Afghanistan, Montenegro
has rotated 20 percent of its armed forces through the ISAF and
Resolute Support missions. It also contributed to the peacekeeping
mission in Kosovo and other NATO missions.
This small country has clearly made significant contributions to the
alliance's efforts around the world and made necessary internal reforms
to address governance, rule of law and corruption issues. I will
continue to monitor these issues closely and expect Montenegro to
continue with these reforms.
Montenegro has been subject to a wave of anti-NATO and anti-western
propaganda emanating from Russia. There are also allegations that a
recent coup plan has Russian ties. Blocking Montenegro's ability to
join NATO will have real implications for how NATO is perceived--Russia
does not get a veto over the decisions of the alliance. We need to send
a strong message of resolve.
No country outside the alliance gets a veto over who gets to join--
epecially Russia, so we must send a strong signal. I urge my colleagues
to pass this resolution as soon as possible and get it to the President
so the President can deposit the instrument of ratification at NATO in
support for Montenegro's bid.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Calling for the Release of Austin Tice
Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, recently I met with the parents of Austin
Tice, a constituent of mine in Texas who unfortunately was abducted in
Syria a few years ago. Of course, his parents have been keeping the
flame alive, hoping that Austin has survived the situation of his
capture.
At their suggestion, last week when I was in Austin, they traveled
over from Houston to visit with me about a briefing they had received
recently from James C. O'Brien, the Presidential Envoy for Hostage
Affairs.
Earlier today, I had a chance to be briefed by Mr. O'Brien. He
delivered some positive yet cautious news about Austin Tice, an
American journalist who we know was taken hostage in Syria 4 years ago.
Mr. O'Brien and his team informed me that they have high confidence
that Austin is alive in Syria, along with other Americans who are being
held captive.
While this is certainly positive news, I can't help but think of his
parents and what they have had to go through these last 4 years. They
are not just counting the months, they are not just counting the days,
but they are literally counting the minutes and the seconds since he
has been gone and then counting these milestones that we typically
observe in our family--birthdays and holidays--that they will never
recover.
So today's news should remind us that we cannot give up until we
bring Austin Tice home. I renew once again my call for his immediate
release by his captors, and I strongly urge the current and future
administration to continue to utilize all possible means to secure his
safe return. Nothing can bring those years and months back, but we can
start the healing process by doing everything possible to find Austin
and bring him home and to bring him home now.
Work Before the Senate
Mr. President, we have gotten quite a bit done this week, but we are
not finished yet. We passed a major medical innovation bill, which
contains not only the Cancer Moonshot project advocated by Vice
President Biden and the President but also other dramatic investments
in the research and development of lifesaving drugs. It also contains a
very important component of mental health reform.
I was glad to contribute some to that effort, particularly the part
that has to do with the intersection of our mental health treatment
regime and our criminal justice system. As I have learned and as many
of us have learned together, our jails have become the treatment center
of last resort for people who are mentally ill, whose condition is not
diagnosed. And if not diagnosed, these people tend to get sicker and
sicker, until they become a danger not only to themselves but
potentially to the communities in which they live.
So we have made good progress, and perhaps thanks to the great
leadership of Senator Alexander, Senator Murray, Senator Murphy,
Senator Cassidy, Tim Murphy over in the House, and the leadership
there, we can be proud of that accomplishment.
Yesterday we finished up our work on the Defense authorization bill
to help our troops both here at home and abroad, to make sure that they
not only got a modest pay raise but that they continue to be supplied
with the equipment and training they need in order to keep America safe
here at home and abroad.
I am hopeful we will continue our work and finish our work, actually,
on the continuing resolution, a bill we need to get done today in order
to keep the lights on. I know my colleague from Illinois, the
Democratic whip, has been working on this. I am hopeful we can get
everybody back to a position of voting yes on this continuing
resolution and we can complete our work.
There are folks across the aisle who want to keep the continuing
resolution from moving forward and literally to shut down the
government. I would have hoped we would have learned our lesson the
hard way that that is not a way to solve our problems.
Unfortunately, the senior Senator from West Virginia, Mr. Manchin,
has taken a position that even though we have funded the health care
benefit program for the miners whom he cares passionately about--we all
certainly understand that--we have done it through the end of the
continuing resolution into April. He is not satisfied with the length
of that continuing resolution. He said he would like to have it up to a
year. But, frankly, I think he is unwilling to take us up on my
commitment, for example, to continue to work with him now that we have
gotten that short-term extension, to work on a longer term extension
once we get our work done.
[[Page S6957]]
The truth is, this bill, the continuing resolution, passed the House
yesterday with overwhelming support from both sides of the aisle. It
received support of 87 percent of the House Republicans and 77 percent
of House Democrats. The House of Representatives has now left town for
the holidays, and it is up to the Senate to finish the job. So at this
point, working all night and into the weekend will not change the
inevitable outcome. Shutting down the government does not help anyone,
especially those holding up the process.
So we are not done yet, but we are close. With a little cooperation,
we will be able to wrap up this Congress soon and turn our focus to the
Nation's priorities.
Let me just mention a couple of other aspects of the continuing
resolution because I have heard, just among conversations with my own
colleagues, some misunderstanding about what we are doing in terms of,
let's say, defense spending, which is one component of it. This
continuing resolution funds the defense sector by a $7.4 billion
increase over the continuing resolution we are currently operating
under. It is true that it is less than the Defense authorization bill
has provided for, but, as we all know, an authorization is not an
appropriation. And when you compare an appropriation or spending for
defense under the continuing resolution we are currently operating
under compared to the one we will pass soon, it represents a $7.4
billion plus-up for defense.
Now, I am one who believes that is the single most important thing
the Federal Government does--providing for the common defense--and I
would argue that is probably not an adequate number, but it is a plus-
up, and it is the number that was passed by the House, and frankly, the
House having left town and gone back home for the holidays, we are left
with a choice of either accepting that level or not doing our job on a
timely basis.
This funding supports troop levels of up to 8,400 in Afghanistan,
$4.3 billion to support counterterrorism and forward operating
missions. This was supported by Chairman Thornberry of the House Armed
Services Committee. It provides a procedure for waiver for the next
Secretary of Defense. This continuing resolution also provides $872
million in funding for the 21st Century Cures legislation we passed
just a few days ago, $500 million to deal with the scourge of opioid
abuse but also to deal with prevention and treatment activities, as
well as $372 million for the National Institutes of Health. It provides
emergency flood and natural disaster relief for potentially up to 45
States, including my own--$4.1 billion in emergency natural disaster
relief. As I mentioned earlier, it does provide a short-term coal
miners fix while we work on a longer term solution. So my hope is,
again, we can get it done.
Nominations
Let me turn to what will be the business of the Senate when we return
in January. One of the first orders of business when we reconvene next
month will be to consider and vote on the new President's nominees to
fill his leadership team, the Cabinet nominees we have been hearing a
lot about in the last couple of weeks.
Last week, I came to the floor to congratulate my friend and our
colleague Senator Jeff Sessions on his nomination to be the next
Attorney General. He is a man of strong conviction and real character,
and I have no doubt whatsoever that he is the right man for the job. I
know that many in our conference share my eagerness to start the
confirmation process so we can give President Trump the team he needs
to hit the ground running.
But I am disappointed, I have to say, in the way some of our
colleagues on the other side of the aisle are already posturing against
the President-elect's nominees. Fortunately for us, they telegraph
their obstruction in the news media, so we know about some of their
nascent plans to obstruct President-elect Trump's Cabinet.
Earlier this week, Politico said that this was the Democratic
strategy: ``Delay tactics could sap momentum from the President's 100
days'' was the headline. The articles goes on to cite conversations
with several Senate Democrats who have already laid out a plan to slow-
walk--because they know they can't block--President-elect Trump's
nominees in the new year. It is one thing to obstruct and to slow the
Senate down, but it is even a bigger problem when they intentionally
try to keep the President-elect from doing his job too. I would ask,
for what? Just to delay progress? To drudge up partisan rhetoric and to
do all they can to damage the administration of the next President of
the United States before it has gotten started? This is absolute
nonsense.
I think this is the kind of activity the American people repudiated
in the last election on November 8. They are sick and tired of the
partisan rhetoric on both sides. They literally want us to get some
things done on their behalf for the American people.
Holding up the confirmation process for purely political gain is
irresponsible and dangerous, but it is also ironic that some of our
Democratic colleagues have changed their tune so much. Here is just one
quote from our friend, the Senator from Michigan, part of the
Democratic leadership. Senator Stabenow said on April 20, 2015: ``When
a President wins an election, they have the right to have their team.''
You know, one thing I have learned is, if you have been around here
long enough, there is a great danger of being on both sides of an
issue, so you have to try to be consistent, even with the temptations
to change your position based on who is up and who is down. But I agree
with the Senator from Michigan. No matter what side you are on, Donald
Trump won the election to the White House. As President, he has the
authority to surround himself with whom he sees fit to advise him for
our country. For our Democratic colleagues to suggest that keeping the
President understaffed is somehow in the best interests of the American
people is absolutely ludicrous.
Let me remind my friends on the other side of the aisle what happened
when Barack Obama became President in January of 2009. Senate
Republicans respected his nominees and gave them quick consideration.
Seven Cabinet members were confirmed on his first day of office. Other
high-level positions followed just days later.
In other words, we came together, understood that the people had
elected a new President, and went to the table ready to cooperate in
good faith even though we knew there would be disagreements about
policy. That is because we didn't want the President to begin his time
in office without the support and the staffing he needed to do his job.
But, at least so far, our Democratic colleagues--some of them--don't
seem to share this same perspective now that they have lost this last
election. I would just ask them to reconsider and to be consistent in
the way they asked us to respond when President Obama won and treat the
people's choice as the next President of the United States with the
respect their vote deserves in terms of making sure he has the Cabinet
necessary to get his administration up and running.
The American people really are disgusted by the sideshows of
dysfunction and obstruction. They want results, and they deserve
results. They made clear, since giving this side of the aisle control
of the White House, the House of Representatives, and the Senate, that
they really wanted the clear to way to making progress on behalf of the
American people. But we all know we cannot do this as one party or the
other; we have to find ways to work together for the common good.
I hope those on the other side of the aisle who indicated they are
determined to obstruct and block the President-elect's new Cabinet
members, his nominees, change their tune and reconsider. Keeping the
new President from the men and women he has chosen to serve alongside
him only makes us less safe, our economy more fragile, and the
government less efficient. In short, it doesn't serve their interests
well.
We are ready to work with our colleagues across the aisle to roll up
our sleeves and get to work next year. I only hope our Democratic
colleagues decide to do the same.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Alexander). The assistant Democratic
leader.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, next to the Senator from Texas, who just
spoke, is the Executive Calendar of the U.S. Senate. There are about 30
pages
[[Page S6958]]
of that calendar on his desk that contain the names of individuals
nominated by the Obama administration, then sent to committee, approved
by the committee, then sent to the calendar to be approved on the floor
of the Senate. The Republican majority in the Senate refuses to call
these names.
The plea that is being made by the senior Senator from Texas is, why
can't we just get along? Well, I hope we can, but this is a bad place
to start, with all of these names sitting right in front of us, waiting
patiently--some of them for over a year--to be called for a vote on the
floor of the Senate. They all were reported out by committees that have
a majority Republican membership.
Of course, there is exhibit A in this, and that is Merrick Garland.
Merrick Garland was President Obama's nominee to fill the vacancy on
the Supreme Court after the death of Antonin Scalia. Since February of
this year, the process has been going forward by the President and the
White House to send a name to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court.
For the first time in the history of the Senate, the Republican
majority refused to give the President's Supreme Court nominee a
hearing or a vote. It has never--underline that word--never happened
before. So we hear the plea from the Senator from Texas for
cooperation: We have to get along here. Well, we should. We owe it to
the country. But, for goodness' sake, let's be honest about where we
stand. There are dozens of names here of men and women who are highly
qualified to serve this Nation, who went through the process of being
nominated by the administration, of being approved by Republican-
majority committees, who have been languishing on the floor of the
Senate because of the refusal of the Republican leadership.
Judge Merrick Garland, who was judged ``unanimously well-qualified''
to serve on the Supreme Court by the American Bar Association, never
even got a hearing before this Republican-controlled Senate. In fact,
the leader of this Senate and many others said: We will not even meet
with him. We won't discuss it with him.
What was their strategy? Well, it is one that paid off, I guess. They
felt if they violated what we consider to be the tradition and duty of
the Senate and not have a hearing and a vote on a nominee, they might
just elect a Republican President. Well, they did. Now they want to
fill their vacancies and they are begging us: Cooperate. Join in with
us. Let's be bipartisan.
I am going to try. I am going to give a fair hearing to each of the
nominees. They deserve it. There are no guarantees on a final vote; it
depends on whether I think they are the right person for the job. But I
do hope there will be some reflection in the process about what we have
just lived through.
There are over 100 vacancies on Federal courts across the United
States. Many of them--30--would have been filled with just the names on
this Executive Calendar that have already cleared the Senate Judiciary
Committee with a majority of Republican Senators. Yet they sit. They
languish. In just a few hours and a few days, they are going to become
part of history as we move to the new Senate on January 3. I wanted to
make that point for the record.
Mr. President, I also wish to say a word about where we are with the
continuing resolution. What is a continuing resolution? Well, we are
used to it around here because we have done it so often. Both political
parties have done it. Here is what it basically says. Think about your
family budget. Let's assume that last year you spent, on average, $100
a month on your utility bills. What if we said to you: In this next
year, we want you to spend $100 a month.
You say: Well, I don't know if that is what it is going to cost. I
hope it is less; it might be more.
Well, the continuing resolution says: Stick with last year's budget,
and you can make special provisions and special allowances if it
happens to be wrong.
You think, that is a heck of a way to run my family. That is what a
continuing resolution does. It takes last year's budget and says: Let's
repeat. Well, things change.
I am on the Appropriations Defense Subcommittee. It is the largest
subcommittee in terms of the amount of domestic discretionary money
that is spent. Things change with our military all the time. You know
that. Presidents come forward and say: We need additional money for our
troops, to prepare them, to equip them, to make sure they are where
they need to be in this world to keep America safe.
What we do with a continuing resolution is we say: Well, we are going
to tell you that you have to live within the bounds of last year's
budget--a continuing resolution.
The people in the Department of Defense, of course, will do their
best. They are not going to spend money this year on things that are
finished. They are not going to repeat and keep building if they have
already finished their building. They are not going to buy things they
have decided are not valuable. But when it comes to making important
budget decisions, their hands will be tied by this Congress.
For the second time, we are going to come up with a 3- or 4-month
budget resolution as we move forward. It is no way to run a government.
Here is the good news: We didn't have to do that. On this
Appropriations subcommittee, Senator Thad Cochran of Mississippi and I
worked a long time. Our staff worked even longer and prepared a
Department of Defense appropriations bill. We are ready--ready to bring
it to the floor, ready to debate it. And it is a good one. It keeps our
country safe. On a bipartisan basis, we agreed on what it should
contain. We can't bring it forward. All of the spending is going to be
done under this continuing resolution. We will be halfway through this
current fiscal year with continuing resolutions if we ever get around
to the appropriations process.
The Presiding Officer is also on the Appropriations Committee and
works in a very bipartisan way in the authorizing Appropriations
Committee on some critical programs for health and education. We should
have brought that before the Senate on the floor, but we did not.
We have this continuing resolution before us, and it has a few things
in it that I think the American people should know. One of them relates
to retired coal miners and their families.
Coal mining has always been a dangerous job, and it is also a job
that has diseases that come with it, such as black lung. So for those
who retire from coal mining, health care is critically important.
Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia has a lot of coal miners, and
they are worried about a cutoff on the health care benefits for retired
coal miners and their surviving widows. He has come before the Senate
over and over again begging the Senate to come up with a plan to make
sure their health care is funded for this next year and for years to
come.
In this continuing resolution, we managed to provide that health care
protection for several months, 3 or 4 months--but not any longer. He is
worried about it. I have talked to him twice today. He has spoken on
this issue countless times on the floor of the Senate. We believe he is
making the right fight.
The fight to ensure that coal miners don't lose their benefits has
been before Congress for 4 years. It has been through the regular order
of committees. It was passed by the Senate Finance Committee with
Democrats and Republicans supporting it. Even in the midst of
dysfunction of partisanship in the Senate, this is apparently one
measure that apparently both parties agree on. Despite all of this, the
continuing resolution does not reflect the needs of and it does not
provide the resources for these families.
The other day, Majority Leader McConnell came to the floor and he
insisted that the continuing resolution addressed the expiring benefits
of retired workers. What he did was extend those benefits for 4 months.
There is no indication of what is going to happen beyond that. It
requires the United Mine Workers health plan to deplete its reserves to
pay for this temporary extension, but then they are broke. There is
nothing in the bank when the CR expires in April. It subjects the
health plan to a reduction in funding from what they currently receive
from the abandoned mine land funds, and it makes no mention of the
pension shortfall that these same mining families face.
[[Page S6959]]
We are looking for a real solution, and we are hoping to get one
soon. Before the end of the day, I think Senator Manchin, Senator
Sherrod Brown, Senator Casey, and others will come to the floor and
speak to this specific issue, but it has been one of the things that
has held us up.
In Illinois, there are nearly 2,000 coal miners and their families
whose health care benefits are in jeopardy, and I have heard from them.
Linda Fleming of Taylorville, IL--that is about 30 miles from where I
live. She is afraid her 86-year-old mother will lose the benefits her
father, who worked at Peabody coal for 30 years, left for her mother
when he passed away 2 years ago. Her husband, who retired from Freeman
coal in Central Illinois after 33 years of service, also received
notice that he was going to lose his benefits.
Larry Garland, a retired coal miner in Millstadt, IL, worked in the
coalfields because it was a good job--a hard job, a dirty job some
days, but it had a promise of lifetime health care for him and his
family. His wife has MS, and he is wondering how he is going to afford
her medical expenses if this isn't funded properly.
Karen Williams, a nurse and daughter of a retired coal miner in Du
Quoin, IL, sees firsthand how important these benefits are to retirees
like her dad, who has a lung disease directly related to his coal-
mining years.
These are just a few of the stories in my State, of the 2,000
affected by this decision, so we take it personally.
There is another provision in here as well. The President-elect has
designated General Mattis to be the next Secretary of Defense. James
Mattis was the head of U.S. Central Command, an extraordinary general,
given some critical assignments by previous Presidents, and every
report that I have read is positive about his service to our country
and his leadership skills in the Marine Corps. But the appointment of
General Mattis is in violation of a basic law. The law, which was
passed over 50 years ago, limited the availability of these retired
military officers to serve as Secretaries of Defense.
In America, we have always prided ourselves--and particularly since
the reorganization of the military after World War II--on civilian
control over the military. It is something that is really built into
the American view about the military and the civilian side of the
Federal Government.
Here we have General Mattis, who is eminently qualified to lead in
many respects, but he is going to be violating that basic law that says
there must be 7 years of separation between your military service and
your service as Secretary of Defense.
There has only been one exception in history, and that was back in
1950, when President Truman asked GEN George C. Marshall, a five-star
general--there aren't many in our history--to come out of retirement.
General Marshall had retired as Secretary of State. President Truman
asked General Marshall to come out of retirement to serve as Secretary
of Defense under the new reorganization plan of our government.
Congress had to change that law. At that time, there was a 10-year
separation. Congress had to change the law, and it took some time to do
it--to debate it, to make sure the policy decision was the right thing
for our country, and to make sure that whatever we did was consistent
with this idea that civilians should control the military. They
ultimately gave the waiver to GEN George C. Marshall, this hero of our
World War II defense, Sectary of State, and a man who won the Nobel
Peace Prize, I might add. So he was an extraordinary man.
This bill that we have before us is going to ask us to expedite this
decision. At the time it was debated before with General Marshall, the
Senate took the time to really consider this. So expediting and
changing the rules of the Senate in this bill is something that hasn't
been done before.
I worry about the impact it is going to have in the long term. It
complicated what should have been a pretty simple and straightforward
bill.
Let me speak as well about the impact on the Department of Defense of
this continuing resolution. A continuing resolution for defense might
be harmful to our Armed Forces, and the longer we live under it, the
worse it could get. If Congress were to pass a 3-month continuing
resolution for the Department of Defense, they are going to feel it
right away. The Pentagon has identified more than 150 programs costing
tens of billions of dollars that will be disrupted by a continuing
resolution. House Republicans fixed no more than a few of these. There
are a lot of others in disarray.
The Defense bill has provided $600 million, for example, for the
Israeli missile defense programs, a substantial increase over last
year's funding level of $487 million. This includes increased funding
for the Arrow 3 program, which will protect Israel against new threats
from long-range Iranian missiles. Under a continuing resolution, this
new initiative is put on hold until we get around to passing a full-
year Defense appropriations bill.
The impacts of the 3-month continuing resolution will also be felt by
the defense industrial base. There is a similar story for the Air
Force's new B-21 bomber. Funding for this program is planned to nearly
double this year to more than $1.3 billion, in order to design the
replacement for the decades-old B-52. The CR makes that difficult, if
not impossible.
The Pentagon's R&D efforts have already been hamstrung by continuing
resolutions, and there the story gets worse. Important medical research
will be postponed in the Department of Defense, and agencies like
DARPA, which had planned to award contracts worth $24 billion, is on
hold.
Instead, due to putting defense funding in this continuing resolution
on autopilot, less than $16 billion, instead of $24 billion, will be
awarded. That is going to slow down innovation and impact untold
numbers of suppliers for our Department of Defense.
The old adage ``time is money'' certainly applies to the Pentagon.
Every day, every week, every month that defense programs are delayed
adds up to more costs to American taxpayers. When the government can't
keep up its end of the contract because funding isn't available, costs
go up, and taxpayers pay more for things they should pay less for.
Every Member of Congress has criticized the Pentagon--I have been in
that queue--for spending too much on weapons systems, but every time we
do a CR, we raise the cost of weapons systems by delaying these
payments.
Our constituents didn't elect us to delay making decisions. They
elected us to get things done. Months of bipartisan committee work and
weeks of bipartisan negotiation shouldn't be cast aside. Putting
government spending on autopilot is not responsible.
Whether you work in a Fortune 500 company or in any agency of the
Federal Government, budgets must adapt to innovation, new challenges,
and new opportunities. Failure to do so is a waste. We owe it to the
American taxpayer and we sure owe it to the men and women in uniform to
do more than just kick the budgetary can down the road. We owe it to
thousands of retired miners to keep our promise, to respect their years
of hard work and give them the benefits they deserve.
Now is not the time to give up and go home. Now is the time to
rededicate ourselves to truly working together, as the Appropriations
Committee has historically done, use their work product, and pass a
bill and an appropriations spending measure that really reflects what
is needed for the national defense of America.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, in just a few hours, funding for the
Federal Government will run out. It is going to run out in just a few
hours. It looks like we are going to blow through that deadline right
here in the Senate.
POLITICO, one of the local newspapers, had an article this morning,
and this is what the headline said. They ran an article with this
headline: ``Democrats push government toward shutdown.'' Let me repeat
that: ``Democrats push government toward shutdown.''
[[Page S6960]]
The article says that Democrats are pushing the government to the
brink of a shutdown. They are doing it with ``coal country Senate
Democrats leading a strategy to oppose a GOP spending bill if their
demands are not met for a longer extension of expiring health care
benefits for coal miners.''
We are talking about a continuing resolution that passed the House
with overwhelming numbers, and it has bipartisan support. The vote was
326 to 96--Republicans and Democrats joining together in the House to
keep the government open--but not the Senate Democrats.
I have been on this floor time and again with Democrats talking about
shutting down the government, and they say that it is the Republicans.
The headline today says: ``Democrats push government toward shutdown.''
Now, the continuing resolution that is being asked to be voted upon
actually includes money to help these miners well into the new year--
through April--and we are going to be looking at everything in the
legislation again when it expires in April. So there is no rush to
settle this issue today.
But here we are in the Senate, with Democrats preparing to shut down
the Government of the United States.
Our goal should not be to bail out a union health plan--and it is a
fund that does have problems. The solution actually ought to be to let
coal miners mine coal again. Let them go back to what they know how to
do--mine coal. That way they can take care of themselves and take care
of their own.
I want to be really clear on this point. The only reason we are in
the position we are in today is because the Obama administration and
Democrats in Washington have been waging a war on coal for the past 8
years. That is the reason we are in the position we are in today.
In 2008, when Barack Obama was running for President, he promised
that this was what he was going to do. He said it. He said that under
his policies, ``if somebody wants to build a coal-fired powerplant,
they can; it's just that it will bankrupt them.''
The President was very clear. So the Democrats should not be
surprised with what we see happening today.
Once he got into office, he did everything he could to keep that
promise and bankrupt as many coal companies as possible. That is
actually what happened. His administration has pushed out one
unnecessary regulation after another on coal producers, on powerplants,
and on customers.
The Environmental Protection Agency wrote new regulations on
powerplant emissions where the emissions go from one State over to
another. The Agency put out extremely stringent rules on emissions from
any new powerplants that were built in this country. Then they wrote
tough rules on the powerplants that were already in existence--rules,
not new laws but rules.
The Obama administration hasn't just tried to bankrupt anyone who
used coal, but they have been doing all they can to make sure the coal
never gets out of the ground.
The Bureau of Land Management imposed a moratorium on new mining
leases on Federal land. In the Rocky Mountain West, that is a
significant amount of the land, and, in many States, it is over half of
the land.
The Obama administration has been doing all they can to make sure
that American coal can't be used not just here in America but can't be
used anywhere in the world.
The Department of the Interior wrote a new rule on coal valuation to
discourage coal exports.
Now, the Army Corps of Engineers has even delayed or denied permits
for new coal export terminals so we could ship a product that is
produced in the United States to people who want to buy our product
overseas. So Americans can't sell the product that we have--that coal--
overseas.
The Obama administration even worked to get the World Bank--the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund--to stop financing new coal-
fired powerplants in developing nations, even though for them, it is
the least expensive cost for electricity, for energy, for the people
there who don't have energy and desperately need it. It has been one
roadblock after another for the last 8 years.
Layer after layer of redtape, strangling the coal industry and coal
miners--the people who go to work every day.
Now, someone wants to say the issue is bailing out one union health
plan and pension fund. The Democrats have waged an all-out
comprehensive war on coal. That is why we are in this situation.
During the Presidential campaign, President Obama has said to
Americans: Please elect Hillary Clinton. Vote for her to protect the
Obama legacy. Well, candidate Hillary Clinton during the election,
during the campaign, said that she would put a lot of coal miners out
of business. So as to the actual people who work, she wants to put them
all out of business.
It has been a war on multiple fronts and a Presidential election all
designed in many ways to keep Americans from using coal, from exporting
coal, and even from mining coal.
The administration has blocked coal production. They have made it
more expensive. Then they have tried to use the smaller market for
coal--since you can't mine it, you can't sell it, and you can't export
it; so there is a smaller market for coal--as an excuse to impose even
more burdens.
The people who are hurt by these policies are hard-working Americans
who just want to go to work, make a living, and support their family.
That is what the coal miners have been up against by the Obama
administration in the last 8 years.
So any attempt by Democrats to blame someone else is just a
distraction. They want to hide the simple fact that it is their
intentional and intensive campaign against coal that has led us to
where we are today--on the brink of a government shutdown tonight.
Health and pension funds can pay benefits for retired workers as long
as the mines are actually working and they can mine coal and sell coal
and make money. If the money coming in goes down, then the money they
need to pay out is not there. That is why we have this problem.
Companies can't meet their obligations, and it is the Democrat's
policies that have caused it. So if the Democrats want to help retired
miners, they should let the other miners get back to work. That is the
way to help the retired miners, let the other miners get back to work.
Well, that is not what they have done. The Obama administration has
done all they can to destroy the market for coal, to force mines to cut
production and to put miners out of work.
Now, I understand there are people in the home States of these
Senators who are very worried, and they have a right to be worried, but
let's just be honest about the real reason these people are hurting:
Miners are struggling because President Obama has been standing on
their necks for a straight period of 8 years. When Democrats focus on
things like health benefits for retirees, they are missing the point
entirely, and they are just trying to dodge the responsibility--the
responsibility for their own disastrous policies.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, the distinguished Senator has just
asked me if I would yield to her; that she has a very short set of
remarks, and I am happy to do so.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin.
Ms. BALDWIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to use a prop
during my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
WRDA
Ms. BALDWIN. Mr. President, I have come to the floor to address a
very important choice for this Senate and, frankly, for President-Elect
Trump.
The time is now for Donald Trump to take a stand in support of
American workers by calling on Republican leadership in Congress to
support strong ``Buy American'' requirements in the Water Resources
Development Act, also known as the Water Infrastructure Improvement
Act.
Just 1 week ago in Cincinnati, OH, President-Elect Trump said his
infrastructure plan would follow two simple rules: ``Buy American and
hire American.'' I support that position, strongly, but unfortunately
the Republican establishment in Washington didn't hear him. They have
removed my ``Buy
[[Page S6961]]
American'' standard from this very important water infrastructure
legislation, and Trump Tower has gone silent on this topic since last
Thursday.
I believe the iron and steel used in water infrastructure projects
should be made in America and that taxpayer dollars should go to
support American jobs and manufacturers, not be spent on Chinese or
Russian iron and steel.
My provision to require this was included in the version of the bill
that passed the Senate with strong bipartisan support on a vote of 95
to 3. However, Speaker Ryan and House Republicans removed this ``Buy
American'' reform from the Water Infrastructure Improvements Act, and
there hasn't been a peep or a tweet from President-Elect Trump. It is
clear to me, and it should be clear to President-Elect Trump as well,
that congressional Republicans are allowing corporate lobbyists,
working on behalf of companies who import steel from Russia and China,
to write the rules in Washington. Importers of cheap foreign steel from
China and Russia have sought to eliminate or loosen these rules for
their own benefit. According to media reports, including the Wall
Street Journal, the importers and their foreign suppliers have hired
the Washington, DC, lobbying firm Squire Patton Boggs to lobby the
Republican leadership in the House against my ``Buy American''
standard, which would provide a long-term and solid commitment to
American workers.
The firm's strategy relies upon, oh, that old revolving door--the
firm employs former House Speaker John Boehner and several former top
Republican aides--to gain access and influence over Congress. These
reports suggest that corporate lobbyists are using their influence over
Congress to support clients that do business with Russian and Chinese
steel companies at the expense of American workers. That is why I am
calling on President-Elect Trump to turn his words in Cincinnati,
spoken just a week ago, into action and to join me in demanding that
Republican leaders in Congress restore our strong ``Buy American''
standard in the final water infrastructure bill.
Together, with Senators Brown and Casey, we offered an amendment to
restore this ``Buy American'' reform, and today we are demanding a
vote. I come to the floor today to ask Majority Leader McConnell for
that vote.
American manufacturers and steelworkers, like the men and women at
Neenah Foundry in Wisconsin who helped build our Nation's water
infrastructure, support our amendment, and they deserve a vote and a
solid commitment from us on a strong ``Buy American'' standard.
Many people in the United States have seen this iconic symbol. Neenah
Foundry--which supports the strong ``Buy American'' amendment--
manufactures, among other things, these manhole covers that we see all
over.
Let us not ever see this.
President-Elect Trump has said that we need to ``drain the swamp,''
and that he will take on lobbyists and special interests that are
writing the rules and rigging the game in Washington against American
workers. If he is serious about ``draining the swamp'' and supporting
American workers, it is time for him to end his silence and speak out
publicly supporting and restoring this ``Buy American'' standard to the
water infrastructure bill that is before the Senate today. It is time
for a vote on a ``Buy American'' standard that respects and rewards
American manufacturers and American workers.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, are we going back and forth?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is no order at the moment.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. May I ask the Senator--because I thought Democrats
had an hour at this time, I agreed to yield to Senator Baldwin. Senator
McCain, do you know how long you will be?
Mr. McCAIN. About 30 minutes.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Well, you go ahead. I will defer.
Mr. McCAIN. I thank my friend from California, but if she had a
shorter time--
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona is recognized.
Mr. McCAIN. I say to my dear friend from California, if she had a few
minutes she would like to take at this time, I would be happy to yield
to her.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Senator, I have about 20 minutes.
Mr. McCAIN. OK. I take it back.
Mr. President, I understand that, as usual, as we get to the edge of
the cliff or the edge of the weekend, that somehow we will have an
agreement and we will vote and we will pass a continuing resolution and
we will all go home. We will all go home for the holidays and
congratulate ourselves on doing such a great job and passing a
congressional resolution.
Meanwhile, the 8,000 men and women who are serving in Afghanistan
will be having a different kind of next couple of weeks. It will be in
combat, it will be in jeopardy, it will be in fighting an implacable
enemy that we have been challenging and fighting for the last 12, 14
years. The 5,000 troops who are in Iraq and Syria, with their lives
literally in danger--there has been a couple, a few casualties, tragic
deaths in recent days. The siege of Aleppo continues and the slaughter
continues of innocent men, women, and children. As the exodus, I am
told, takes place from Aleppo, the Russians, Iranian Revolutionary
Guard, and Bashar al-Assad's thugs are culling out the young men for
special treatment and interrogation. God only knows what that is like.
Of course, the flow of refugees continues, now adding to the 6 million.
The 500,000 who have been killed, that continues. And we are about to
pass an appropriations bill that reduces our ability to help those men
and women who are serving our country in uniform get their job done. We
are talking about a continuing resolution that is a reduction in
spending, that freezes accounts in place, and does not give us the
capability to move them around to meet the threats we are facing around
the world. I must say to my colleagues, this is disgraceful. This is
absolutely disgraceful.
We are going to kick the can down the road because we failed to fund
our troops. The fiscal irresponsibility of another continuing
resolution will force the Department of Defense to operate for 7 months
in the fiscal year without a real budget. Tell me one company or
corporation in the world, small or large, that has their budget frozen
for 7 months of the year and expects to operate with any kind of
efficiency. You can't. You can't.
Now, the incoming President of the United States says he wants to
spend more money on defense. Are we doing that with this continuing
resolution? Of course not. The incoming President of the United States
says we don't have a big enough Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force,
and we are cutting the size of the military.
Meanwhile, the President of the United States gives one of the most
bizarre speeches I have ever heard in my life about what a great job he
has done, what a fantastic job; and thank God ISIS does not pose an
existential threat to the United States of America--never mind San
Bernardino, never mind all the other attacks across the country and
Europe. Never mind those. It is not an existential threat. This is the
same Barack Obama who said ISIS was the JV and couldn't carry Kobe's T-
shirt.
So what are we doing? By God, we are going to be out of here. Thank
God, we are going to be out of here. And what are we doing? We haven't
passed a defense appropriations bill that funds our troops. Earlier
this year we had a defense appropriations bill, approved unanimously by
the Appropriations Committee, but Democrats put politics ahead of our
troops, filibustered that legislation, and brought the Senate to a
halt.
Does anybody wonder about the approval rating of Congress when we
will not even appropriate the money to defend this Nation and pay for
the men and women in uniform who are sacrificing as we speak? Of course
not.
Why haven't we passed the bill? Now, fresh off an election--the
election is over. Republicans won control of the House and the Senate
and the White House in part by promising to rebuild our military.
Congress is about to cut defense spending again by passing another
irresponsible continuing resolution.
Let me be clear, this continuing resolution would cut resources to
our troops, delay the cutting-edge equipment they need, and hamper the
war in Afghanistan. A lot of my colleagues
[[Page S6962]]
may not understand, you authorize certain amounts of money for certain
programs. With a continuing resolution, you can't shift that money
around. Suppose there is a new product, there is a new weapon, there is
a new ability we have. With a continuing resolution, now going on for 7
months, we will do that. Congratulations. Congratulations.
So this is Washington. Democrats filibuster funding for our troops in
a political game to extort more funding for pet domestic programs.
Republicans feign outrage. Then those same Republicans return months
later to negotiate a continuing resolution that gives Democrats the
domestic spending increases they always wanted, does so by--guess what.
Guess what. There is an increase in this continuing resolution for
domestic programs, some of them pork-barrel projects, and cutting funds
for defense. I am not making that up. I wonder how many of the 100
Senators who will be voting on this continuing resolution know that
this continuing resolution increases domestic spending and decreases
defense spending. What a sham. What a fraud. Is there any wonder the
American people hold us in such contempt? We are down to paid staff and
blood relatives.
There is a lot wrong with this continuing resolution, but let me
start with the rank hypocrisy embedded deep within its pages. Five
years ago Congress recognized the need to rein in Federal spending, but
instead of addressing the actual drivers of our deficits and debt, in
one of the great copouts in history, it settled for a meat-ax approach.
Congress passed the Budget Control Act, which cuts spending across the
board. No matter how worthwhile, no matter how necessary, treat it all
the same and cut it across the board, OK? It is designated to be so
terrible, this sequestration--remember, it was 5 years ago--
sequestration would be so terrible it would force Republicans and
Democrats to negotiate a more reasonable compromise.
We know how that worked out. The Budget Control Act failed to force a
grand bargain on the budget, but it was so genuinely terrible that
Congress had to negotiate a series of short-term agreements to get out
from under it. The latest of these was the Bipartisan Budget Act, which
was passed last year and provided small increases for defense and on
defense spending.
This agreement was consistent with the principle articulated by many
of my Republican and Democratic colleagues--that defense and nondefense
were supposed to be treated equally. It does not matter when you see
the world on fire, no matter when you see 6 million refugees out of
Syria, no matter when you see 500,000 dead, no matter when you see the
Chinese asserting control over the Asia-Pacific region, no matter that
you see Vladimir Putin dismembering Ukraine and putting pressures of
enormity on the Balkan countries, no matter that you see the Russians,
now a major power in the Middle East for the first time since Anwar
Sadat, threw him out of Egypt in 1973--no matter all that. No matter
that we continue to increase because we react to the number of troops
and the amount of equipment that we are having to send to Iraq and
Syria and other places in the world--treat the EPA the same as the U.S.
Marine Corps. Treat the IRS the same as our brave pilots who are now
flying in combat in Iraq and Syria. Treat them the same. This was the
so-called principle of parity.
For the record, I never believed this trope. Instead, I held fast to
another principle--that funding our troops would be based solely on
what they need to defend the Nation. Isn't that an unusual sentiment--
to fund the troops with what they need to defend the Nation, to give
them the very best equipment so that, in the testimony of the uniform
service chiefs before the Armed Services committee, who said in
unvarnished words--these great military uniformed leaders said: We are
putting the lives of the men and women in uniform ``at greater risk.''
Is no one in this body embarrassed that we are putting the lives of
the men and women in the military at greater risk? What is happening
here?
Many of my colleagues disagreed with me, which was their right. Over
the last 2 years as Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
having listened to the testimony of our most senior military commanders
about the growing risk to the lives of our servicemembers, I have tried
to break the hold of these arbitrary spending limits, increase defense
spending, and give our troops the resources they need to defend the
Nation.
Let me tell you what is happening to the military today. We have seen
the movie before--after the Vietnam war. They have less ability to
train. They have less ability to operate. Our pilots in the Air Force,
Marine Corps, and Navy are flying fewer hours per month than Chinese
and Russian pilots are. They are having to rob planes. They have even
had to go to the Boneyard in Tucson, AZ, to find parts for their
airplanes. They are that short of them.
You know what is going to happen? The pilots of these services are
going to get out in droves because the commercial airline pilots who
were hired after the Vietnam war are all retiring. All these people
want to do is fly airplanes. When they are in Syria and Iraq, yes, they
fly a lot. When they get back, they don't fly at all. Why? They don't
have the money. When you cut defense, the first thing that suffers is
operations, maintenance, and training. Again, it is not as if it is a
new phenomenon. We have seen the movie before.
Here we are. We passed a defense bill last year that provided $38
billion in additional resources to give our servicemembers the modern
equipment and advanced training they need. President Obama vetoed that
bill because, as his White House explained, he would ``not fix defense
without fixing nondefense spending.''
Think about that. The President of the United States puts defending
this Nation on the same level as domestic programs. I am all for the
domestic programs. I am not objecting to them, but to put them on the
same level as the defense of the Nation partially explains the
disasters over the last 8 years. America has decided to lead from
behind, and America is now held without respect or regard throughout
the world. We see all kinds of bad things happening, and I will not
bother my colleagues because all I have to do is pick up the morning
paper or turn on the television.
This year I offered an amendment to the Defense authorization bill on
the Senate floor to add $18 billion to the defense budget, an increase
that would have returned defense spending to the level the President
himself had requested and for which the Department of Defense had
planned. The Senate Democrats and some Republicans voted against that
amendment. One Democratic Senator objected, saying: ``If defense funds
are increased, funding for domestic agencies must also be increased.''
Got that? ``If defense funds are increased, funding for domestic
agencies must also be increased.''
Some Republicans, mainly on the Appropriations Committee, argued that
the amendment would not adhere to the Bipartisan Budget Act and stall
momentum to pass appropriations bills as we consider yet another
continuing resolution. We see how well that worked out.
So entrenched was this absurd notion of parity between defense and
nondefense spending that when President Obama decided to keep more
troops in harm's way in Afghanistan--finally recognizing a little
reality--he refused to pay for them unless nondefense spending received
an identical funding increase. Let me make that clear. The President of
the United States--recognizing that the Taliban was not only not
defeated but was gaining ground in parts of Afghanistan, the Afghan
military sustaining unsustainable casualty rates--sent more troops to
Afghanistan, sent more help to Afghanistan, but wouldn't pay for them
unless we increased domestic spending.
Is that some kind of nonsense? So entrenched was this absurd notion
of parity between defense and nondefense spending that the bottom line
is this: Congress has had multiple opportunities to give our troops the
resources they need. Each time, aided and abetted by the President and
his administration, we squandered these opportunities because of the
so-called principle of parity--that ``any increase in funding must be
shared equally between defense and nondefense.''
After all that, it turns out that parity was merely politics
masquerading
[[Page S6963]]
as principle. Because, dear friends, now Congress is about to pass a
continuing resolution that shatters any notion of parity, breaks the
spending limits of the Bipartisan Budget Act, increases nondefense
spending at the expense of our troops, and even creates a loophole that
allows nondefense spending to skirt the law and avoid sequestration--
not defense spending, nondefense spending. It is crazy.
Under this continuing resolution, nondefense spending--get this. I
don't know how many of my colleagues know this. Under this continuing
resolution, nondefense spending is $3 billion above the Bipartisan
Budget Act. Where does this additional money come from? It was taken
from our troops. Under the continuing resolution, defense spending is
$3 billion below the Bipartisan Budget Act.
As a result of increased funding, nondefense spending violates the
Bipartisan Budget Act and would face sequestration at the beginning of
next year to bring it back in line with spending levels allowed under
the law. Not so fast, my friends--the continuing resolution contains a
``get out of jail free'' card that allows nondefense spending to break
the Bipartisan Budget Act to avoid sequestration.
Here is what we are doing: We are cutting defense spending. We are
increasing nondefense spending, even though it breaks the act and we
have a provision in there that that is OK. I just hope that everybody
knows what they are voting on in this.
Am I missing something? Am I missing something? Do Republicans
control the House of Representatives? They are the ones who put this
provision in. It is the Republicans who control the House of
Representatives. Do Republicans fill the majority of the seats in this
Senate? The last time I checked, they do. Did the Republican candidate
just win the White House?
What on Earth are we doing here? Why are Republicans who complained
for so long about runaway government spending about to vote on a take-
it-or-leave-it continuing resolution that increases nondefense
spending? Why are Republicans doing that? Why are Republicans who
proclaim that ours is the party of strong defense cutting funding for
our military to plus up spending on domestic programs? What is going on
here?
Why are Republicans who voted down increased funding for our military
because of the Bipartisan Budget Act voting for a continuing resolution
that allows nondefense spending to exceed that law and creates a
loophole to escape sequestration?
Why are Democrats who lectured for years--I got that lecture for
hours and hours about the principle of fairness, of parity--who
insisted that funding increases must be shared equally between defense
and nondefense. Why are those Democrats about to support a continuing
resolution that explicitly breaks that principle and that funds
increases for nondefense by taking from defense?
Regretfully, as I say about Republicans and Democrats, the answer,
and the only answer I can offer is hypocrisy--rank hypocrisy. What is
so disheartening about the hypocrisy of this continuing resolution is
how unnecessary it is. We can pass an appropriations bill. The
appropriations bill was passed out of the Appropriations Committee
unanimously. We can pass it. We can do it tomorrow; we can do it
tonight. But they don't want to do that. They want this continuing
resolution with all this stuff hidden in it, with a lot of legislative
things in it that we find out, guess what, 10 hours, 24 hours, maybe
even 48 hours before we vote on it. That is when we find out what is in
the bill.
I would challenge--I would like to take a poll of my 100 colleagues
here. How many of them have read the continuing resolution? I will bet
you the number is zero. With this legislation, Congress has already
done the hard work of negotiating a bipartisan compromise for defense
spending. The Defense appropriations bill from earlier this year could
easily be amended to reflect the compromise, and the Senate could be
taking up the bill, but we are not. Instead, we are about to vote on
another continuing resolution that would cut $6 billion from the level
authorized by the NDAA.
I want to point out again: Who is being harmed by this? My friends,
obviously, as I have stated, absolutely the men and women who are
serving. They are the ones who are suffering from this. In the Defense
authorization bill, we have a 2.1-percent pay raise for the military.
In the continuing resolution, it is not in there. We are not even going
to reward our men and women in the military with a pay raise that they
have earned.
Some of my colleagues on the Appropriations Committee will argue that
this continuing resolution is an increase to defense spending. That is
a lie. I don't say this very often, but anyone who says there is an
increase in defense spending in this continuing resolution is lying.
For those of you who are not familiar with Washington doublespeak, let
me explain how cut translates into increase inside the beltway. The new
continuing resolution represents a modest increase over the previous
continuing resolution passed in September, but that legislation
contained a large cut to defense spending. Just as now, Members of this
body were asked to go along with this cut with a promise that a Defense
appropriations bill would soon follow. None appeared.
In other words, the best we can say about the continuing resolution
we are considering today in this body today--and I am sure it will be
passed on a Friday night--is that it merely contains a smaller defense
cut than its predecessor. Twist the figures all you want, and I
guarantee you that somebody on the Budget Committee or the Budget
Committee chairman will twist it. The fact is, this continuing
resolution is $6 billion less than what Congress just authorized for
defense spending. Yesterday, we passed a Defense authorization bill,
and this is $6 billion less than what we authorized. That is what we
should be grading ourselves on because that is what our military has
told us they need and what this body has agreed to provide them.
Let me emphasize that we go through weeks and months of hearings,
markups, input, and debate, and we come up with a Defense authorization
bill and provide this body in the Congress and the Nation with our best
judgment of what America needs to defend this Nation and how much it
costs. This continuing resolution will cut that number by $6 billion.
That may not be much money among some, but it is one heck of a lot of
money overall.
The hypocrisy of this continuing resolution is nauseating. The
defense cut it contains is blind to the needs of our military, but
ultimately it is the basic fact that Congress has failed to pass an
appropriations bill and will be forced to pass another continuing
resolution that will have the most real and immediate consequences for
our servicemembers. Our Nation asks a lot of the men and women serving
in uniform. As I mentioned, we are going to go home tonight, I am sure,
because of the pressures that always take place on a Thursday or
Friday, and they will still be out there. They will still be out there
on the front line. They will be in Syria, Iraq, and helping the Afghan
fighters defend their nation. They won't be going home, but we will.
And what will we leave them with? A $6 billion reduction in their
ability to defend this Nation.
The continuing resolution locks our military into last year's budget
and last year's priorities. Tell me a company in the world where you
have to stick with the priorities from the year before as you approach
the coming year as to what you want to do and you are locked into the
last year's provisions.
Consider what happened to our counter-ISIL efforts under the
continuing resolution that is about to expire. Last week, military
leaders had to come to Congress hat in hand seeking relief from the
constraints of a continuing resolution in order to keep up the fight
against ISIL. Since the beginning of the year, the Defense Department
requested money to support local forces in Syria who are fighting to
drive ISIL out of Raqqa, but because we are on a continuing resolution,
money wasn't there. The Secretary of Defense, the highest civilian
leader of our military, had to spend his time searching couch cushions
to continue our fight against ISIL. Every day that ISIL remains
entrenched in Raqqa is another day they can plot attacks on our
homeland. It is another day they can terrorize Syria. It is another day
[[Page S6964]]
they can call themselves a caliphate. It is another day they can
attract foreign fighters to their murderous cause. All of the Defense
authorization and appropriations bills included the money to fund
Syrians fighting to remove ISIL from its sanctuary, but the continuing
resolution did not. If we had done our jobs, this wouldn't be an issue,
but it was.
The same thing will happen under a new continuing resolution that
does not fully fund the war in Afghanistan. The legislation will force
the Department of Defense to pay for urgent requirements to deter
Russian aggression in Europe by cannibalizing funds needed to help our
Afghan partners take the fight to our common terrorist enemies. When it
comes to national security, robbing Peter to pay Paul is not a
strategy; it is a disgrace. This wouldn't be necessary under an
appropriations bill, but it is under this continuing resolution, which
is blind to the realities of our dangerous world, and the consequences
will be felt on the battlefield.
The Department of Defense had requested $814 million to provide our
Afghan partners with the helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft they need
to take the fight to the Taliban and ISIL. This continuing resolution
contains none of that funding. If there is anything we need in this
fight, it is airpower.
General Nicholson, the commander of U.S. and international forces in
Afghanistan, sent me a letter yesterday, and he warns that without this
funding, ``the Afghan security forces risk losing the positive close
air support momentum gained over the past year, which proved
instrumental in enabling them to thwart the enemy eight separate times
in its efforts to seize provincial capitals.''
What are we doing here? With the continuing resolution, we are
putting the lives of countless Afghans in danger because we are not
giving them the air support that they need.
Our failure to do our jobs and pass this bill and this irresponsible
continuing resolution will make it even harder to achieve success in
our Nation's longest war. This is shameful. A continuing resolution
will also make the job of managing the government's largest agency even
more difficult and at the worst possible time. The Presidential
transition process currently underway is difficult enough on its own,
but no incoming President has ever had to inherit a Department of
Defense operating under a continuing resolution. I will repeat that: No
President has ever had to inherit a Department of Defense operating
under a continuing resolution, and this is not the time to break the
streak.
Under a continuing resolution of any duration, our military, by law,
has to delay 78 new military systems and stall additional production of
89 others. A continuing resolution delays major research and
development initiatives. The latest continuing resolution provides DOD
relief from these restrictions for the Ohio replacement program, the
KC-46 tanker, and the Apache and Black Hawk helicopters, but that is
only four programs out of hundreds. Worse still, this leaves DOD with
the wrong mix of funding, causing shortfalls in important accounts
totaling $22 billion. Let me repeat: The continuing resolution leaves
the Department of Defense with a $22 billion shortfall across important
accounts. Locking in funding at last year's level across all accounts
is willful ignorance of the Department's plan to grow necessary
programs and cut wasteful ones. This is not wise fiscal stewardship.
This is reckless government on autopilot, and here are just a few of
the consequences.
The continuing resolution is totally blind to the military readiness
crisis that is putting the lives of servicemembers at risk. We are
asking our troops to be ready to defend this Nation at a moment's
notice. We are asking our troops to be ready to take the fight to ISIL.
We are asking our troops to be ready to deter, and if necessary, defeat
aggression in Europe, the Middle East, and Asia-Pacific. We are asking
them to be ready today, but a continuing resolution would force
tradeoffs that undermine readiness.
We heard about the readiness crisis all year, but what does it really
mean? It means the Navy doesn't have enough money to maintain ships and
aircraft. It means that ships that taxpayers spent billions of dollars
to buy will be anchored at docks instead of out to sea. It means our
Navy and Marine Corps aircraft will be grounded and their pilot skills
wasting away. It means the Air Force won't have the funding required to
recruit airmen to keep its aircraft maintained and flying.
The NDAA we just passed would have stopped the military from cutting
soldiers, sailors, and airmen. But because of this continuing
resolution, the Army will begin firing 3,000 qualified captains. That
is 3,000 soldiers with families. That is 3,000 soldiers who want to
stay in the military and continue to serve their country. That is 3,000
soldiers willing to put their lives on the line for us, but because we
refuse to do our jobs, 3,000 soldiers are going to get pink slips. That
is shameful. It is madness.
Every senior leader at the Department of Defense has warned Congress
about the negative impacts of a continuing resolution on our troops.
Secretary of Defense Ash Carter stated that ``a continuing resolution
is a straitjacket'' that ``prevents us from fielding a modern, ready
force in a balanced way.'' A continuing resolution, Secretary Carter
said, ``undercuts stable planning and efficient use of taxpayer
dollars.''
The Commandant of the Marine Corps, General Neller, warned that a
long-term continuing resolution ``dramatically increases risk to an
already strained fiscal environment and disrupts predictability and our
ability to properly plan and execute a budget and a 5-year program.''
The Chief of Staff of the Air Force, General Goldfein, warned that a
continuing resolution would reduce procurement of critical munitions
for the ISIL fight, affecting not only the United States but our
coalition partners that rely on us to deliver preferred munitions.
The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Richardson, warned that a
continuing resolution would lead to wasted taxpayer dollars. Under a
continuing resolution, the Navy would be forced to break up its
contract actions into smaller pieces. As a result, Admiral Richardson
warned that the Navy would not be able to ``take advantage of savings
from contractors who could better manage their workload and pass on
lower costs to the Navy. These redundant efforts drive additional time
and cost into the system, for exactly the same output.''
The Chief of Staff of the Army, General Milley, made a similar
warning about waste and inefficiency resulting from budget uncertainty,
saying, ``things like multiyear contracts''--et cetera, et cetera.
General Milley is right.
I say to my colleagues: This madness has to end. It is time for
Congress to do its job. When it comes to doing our constitutional duty
to provide for the common defense, there is no call for lazy shortcuts
that shortchange our troops. We passed the Defense authorization bill.
Now let's fund it by passing the Defense appropriations bill, which
gives our troops the resources, predictability, and flexibility they
need and deserve. Next year, with a new President and Congress, let's
go to work immediately on ending sequestration once and for all and
returning to a strategy-driven defense budget. That is what the
American people expect of us, and it is what the men and women who
serve and sacrifice on our behalf deserve from us.
As I said, if I know my history--and I have been around here long
enough--there will be an agreement. We will have a vote, and then go
home and congratulate ourselves. For the next 15 days--or whatever it
is--we are going to enjoy the Christmas holidays with our families and
friends, pat ourselves on the back, and tell each other what a great
job we have done.
We shouldn't do that. There are men and women serving in uniform
overseas away from their families and friends and putting their lives
in danger. We haven't done our job. We haven't done our job to provide
for their security and their defense. What we have done is miserably
failed, and this is another--not the first--and maybe the most
egregious, given the state of the world today as we watch thousands
being slaughtered in Aleppo, as we watch the Syrian refugee crisis, as
we watch the Chinese act more aggressively, as we watch a buildup of
the
[[Page S6965]]
military in Kaliningrad, a place most people have not heard of, and we
watch the continued aggression and advantage that our enemies and
adversaries believe are appropriate action for them in light of our
weakness.
What do we do? The message we send to the men and women who are
serving in our military is that we care more about being home for the
holidays than we do about you.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Barrasso). The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, just to ensure that there is no confusion,
I ask that I be recognized for such time as I may consume at the
conclusion of the remarks of the distinguished senior Senator from
California.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from California.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, before I begin, I wish to say a few
words about my colleague from California who is retiring. I very much
regret that I was not able to be here for her remarks on the floor.
However, I have written a rather extensive statement for the record. I
want to say here and now that no one has fought for California or for
this country harder. She has had a dedicated and long career of service
to our country, and her accomplishments are many.
Those are documented in the record, and I believe they will stand the
test of time. So I want to offer my heartiest congratulations to her
for 24 years of service to this country. We came to the Senate
together. I have very much respected her, her work, and her diligence
over these years.
WRDA
Now, Mr. President, I rise to speak about the Water Resources
Development Act, which the House passed yesterday afternoon 360 to 61.
My colleague Senator Boxer was the author of that bill. I believe it is
a good bill. There is a whole litany of excellent projects that benefit
the environment as well as the economy of so many of our States.
I want to say something else about my remarkable colleague. We first
arrived here in the Senate 24 years ago. She has accomplished a lot in
that time, protecting the environment, defending the downtrodden and
vulnerable, and fighting for California. She is a tremendous Senator,
and I believe her record will withstand the test of time.
Mr. President, I would like to focus on two provisions in this bill,
the water infrastructure provisions and funding for Lake Tahoe
restoration and protection.
First, this bill includes many vital water infrastructure projects
that will limit the risk of flooding, restore critical wildlife habitat
and keep our ports running smoothly.
The bill authorizes $177 million for the South San Francisco Bay
Shoreline. I have been working on this project for decades, alongside
the local sponsors and Army Corps of Engineers.
With nearly 200 square miles of communities in low-lying areas along
the shoreline, some that are more than 13 feet below sea level, this
area faces a significant threat of major tidal flooding.
Coupled with the restoration of more than 15,000 acres of wetlands,
this project will protect vulnerable communities and improve wildlife
refuges and public and private infrastructure valued at more than $50
billion.
The bill also authorizes the Los Angeles River Project. At a cost of
$1.42 billion, this project will restore 11 miles of the Los Angeles
River from Griffith Park to downtown Los Angeles.
The bill also authorizes $880 million to reduce floods along American
and Sacramento Rivers near Sacramento, $780 million to reduce flooding
in West Sacramento, and expands eligibility of an existing Federal
program increasing funding for harbor maintenance to include the ports
of Hueneme and San Diego.
The bill also includes a piece of legislation that deals with a
passion of mine, saving Lake Tahoe.
This summer, more than 7,000 people joined together for the 20th
Annual Lake Tahoe Summit.
I proudly shared the stage with Senators Reid and Boxer, California
Governor Jerry Brown, and President Obama.
This summit was an impressive bookend to Senator Reid's efforts to
save Lake Tahoe.
In 1997, he invited President Clinton for the first Lake Tahoe Summit
to highlight the declining health of the lake and to announce a major
Federal restoration effort.
That summit launched an impressive public-private partnership that
has since invested $1.9 billion in restoration projects in Lake Tahoe
and the surrounding basin.
This remarkable partnership brought Federal, State, local, tribal,
and private interests together to help save the lake.
Their work got a real boost in 2000 when we passed the original Lake
Tahoe Restoration Act, which authorized $300 million over 10 years.
That $1.9 billion has been invested in nearly 500 completed projects
and 120 more that are in the works. These include erosion control on
729 miles of roads, 65,000 acres of hazardous fuels treatment, more
than 16,000 acres of wildlife habitat restored, and 1,500 acres of
stream environment zones restored. And 2,770 linear feet of shoreline
has been added, creating or improving 152 miles of bike and pedestrian
routes.
But we still have more work to do.
The Tahoe Environmental Research Center at UC-Davis recently released
their annual State of the Lake report.
Their research highlighted several threats to the lake: Climate
change and drought are creating increasing the potential for a
catastrophic wildfire in the Tahoe Basin, sedimentation and pollution
continue to decrease water quality and the lake's treasured clarity,
and invasive species threaten the economy of the region.
The time to act to is now, and the Federal Government must take a
leading role--close to 80 percent of the land surrounding Lake Tahoe is
public land, primarily in more than 150,000 acres of national forest.
This bill authorizes $415 million over 10 years to help address those
challenges.
This bill authorizes $150 million for wildfire fuel reduction and
forest restoration projects, $45 million to fight invasive species
including a successful boat inspection program, $113 million for
projects to prevent water pollution and help improve water
infrastructure that helps to maintain the lake's water clarity, $80
million for the Environmental Improvement Program which prioritizes the
most effective projects for restoration, and $20 million for the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service to help with the recovery of several native
fish species.
The bill also requires an annual report to Congress detailing the
status of all projects undertaken to make sure dollars are expended
wisely.
We have an opportunity to ensure the future of Lake Tahoe by passing
the Water Resources Development Act of 2016 and, thus, passing the Lake
Tahoe Bill of 2015.
I want to speak today about the California drought language in this
bill, which represents 3 years of effort on my part. I believe these
provisions are both necessary and will help our State. I think it is
noticeable that both Democrats and Republicans in the California House
delegation voted for this bill. In fact, a substantial majority of
California House Democrats--21 out of 37--voted yes for the bill.
I particularly want to thank Representatives Costa and Garamendi for
their help in this bill throughout this effort. They really made a
major effort. Overall, 35 of the 51 California representatives from
both parties who voted, from up and down our very big State, voted for
this bill and its drought provisions.
California is now entering into our sixth year of drought. Experts
have indicated that even if this is the final year of drought, which
many doubt, it will take an additional time of 4 years to recover. The
effects of the drought have been devastating. In the past 2 years,
35,000 people have lost jobs; $4.9 billion has been lost to the
California economy; 1 million acres of farmland were fallowed in 2015;
69 communities have little or no water; and 2,400 private water wells
have gone dry. We had 102 million trees on Federal land die during this
period of time. Parts of the Great Central Valley have seen as much as
1 foot of land subsidence. That is where the ground actually sinks
because of groundwater depletion. This
[[Page S6966]]
means cracks in canals, bridges, and pipelines. I have seen those
photos. We have had 95- and 98-percent salmon mortality in the past 2
years because of problems with cold water temperature valves and probes
at Shasta Dam, which provides the cold water to the Sacramento River.
To address the devastating impacts of this drought and to create a
long-term new infrastructure that moves away from dams, the bill
contains two key parts: short-term provisions and long-term provisions.
Before I go into them, I want to say that the drought part of the bill
is supported by 218 cities, 6 county governments, 446 water districts,
both urban and agricultural.
I ask unanimous consent that that information be printed in the
Record directly following my remarks.
Those operational provisions are short term. They last just 5 years.
They don't contain any mandatory pumping levels. This bill does not say
that if the water flow is such and such, the pumps that move that water
must pump at X, Y, or Z. There is none of that. Instead, what this bill
does is require daily monitoring for fish when water is turbid.
This monitoring also takes place more frequently and closer to the
pumps than it does today. Today, it is at 17 miles from the pumps, and
the change is 12 miles from the pumps. It also requires agencies to
explain their decisions when they reduce pumping. This will bring about
transparency, provide solid reasoning for decisions, and, I think,
reduce the angst that exists out there about how those systems are
controlled.
Those provisions simply require the agencies to use the best
available science based on real-time monitoring so that we can save
some water from those heavy flows, as you see on the chart next to me.
These are the heavy flows that came in February and March, and we were
not able to hold this water and use it later in the year.
What we have done here is tracked every single day from the beginning
of the year and what the pumping level was and what the water level
was. We also talk about the numbers caught, which are very small: adult
smelt, 12; juvenile smelt, 8, and winter-run salmon, 56. So this can be
improved, and we seek to do that.
We also provide provisions that simply require the agency to use the
best available science based on real-time monitoring, so, again, we can
save water from the heavy flows, as you have just seen. Even if this
sixth year is a bumper crop of water, UCLA predicts that it is going to
take 4\1/2\ years to recover from the drought.
Other short-term provisions include extending the time period for
voluntary water transfers by 5 months; ending the winter storm payback
requirement, which says: If you save this water, you must put it back
into the ocean; allowing a 1-to-1 ratio for voluntary water transfers
that can help both fish and farms; and allowing expedited reviews of
transfers and construction of barriers to protect water quality.
These water supplies are not for big corporate agriculture, as some
would have you think; this water is for the tens of thousands of small
farms that have gone bankrupt, like a melon farmer who sat in my office
with tears in his eyes and told me how he lost a farm that he had
struggled to pay for and that had been part of his family for
generations. There are also small towns in the Central Valley, where
people are still bathing with bottled water and some 2,500 wells have
run dry.
We worked for 2 years with Interior, NOAA fisheries, and the Council
on Environmental Quality to make sure there were strong environmental
protections, including a very comprehensive savings clause, and we will
get to that in a minute.
So the bill in this measure requires agency scientists to review
every proposed action. That is right. Scientists must review and
approve every proposed action under this bill. These are agency
biologists and experts in endangered species. The bill requires them to
carefully review every proposal to move water under the provisions of
this bill. That is what they do today, and that is what they would do
under the bill. That is what the ESA requires, and that is what this
bill will require.
The savings clause in this bill also makes clear that the provisions
will not override existing environmental law, like the Endangered
Species Act and biological opinions.
The bill also makes clear that nothing in this bill will affect water
quality. Drinking water will still be available at the same levels of
quality as before. The State will have the same ability to regulate
water in the delta as it always has had. To make this even clearer,
each individual section also requires consistency with the
environmental laws and biological opinions.
These protections are referenced in the bill no less than 36 times
throughout. In fact, the Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation
wrote on June 27. He wrote about the savings clause: ``[The savings
clause] leads me to conclude that the directives in this legislation
are to be implemented in a manner consistent with the ESA and the
current biological opinions for federal and state projects.''
I ask unanimous consent to have this letter and my memo concerning
the drought savings clause be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
U.S. Department of the Interior,
Bureau of Reclamation,
Washington, DC, June 27, 2016.
Hon. Dianne Feinstein,
U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Dear Senator Feinstein: Thank you for your letter of
February 24, 2016, addressed to President Barack Obama
regarding your legislation entitled the California Long-Term
Provisions for Water Supply and Short-Term Provisions for
Emergency Drought Relief Act, numbered S. 2533 and H.R. 5247.
I apologize for the delay in this response.
As you know, I testified on S. 2533 before the Senate
Energy and Natural Resources Committee's Water and Power
Subcommittee on May 17, 2016. Your legislation authorizes
significant new investments in proven water supply and
conservation activities that will help make California's
water supplies more resilient in the face of drought. Locally
supported projects such as water recycling, water efficiency
improvements, desalination, groundwater storage, distributed
treatment systems and surface water storage are given
thoughtful consideration in S. 2533, with allowance for
robust non-federal cost-sharing for new projects.
In addition, the bill contains an important savings clause
in section 701 which states that the bill shall not be
interpreted or implemented in a manner that ``overrides,
modifies, or amends'' the Endangered Species Act (ESA) or the
application of the biological opinions governing operations
in the Bay Delta. The combination of these provisions leads
me to conclude that the directives in this legislation are to
be implemented in a manner consistent with the ESA and the
current biological opinions for the federal and state
projects.
While S. 2533 and H.R. 5247 codify the flexibility
Reclamation has exercised in its drought contingency plans
over the past several years, I also wish to be clear that
there is little, if any, operational flexibility remaining in
the biological opinions beyond that already being exercised.
Consequently, as indicated by the 2015 Statement of
Administration Position on H.R. 2898 (Valadao), the
Department would be concerned about, and would likely oppose,
any subsequent change in the authorizations contained in S.
2533 or H.R. 5247 that purport to create additional
flexibility in the biological opinions by amending those
opinions or the ESA itself.
I believe that on balance, S. 2533 is a beneficial piece of
legislation and will help California's water supply in the
near- and long-term. I appreciate your ongoing efforts to
work with Reclamation and the Department on this bill.
[intend to continue this partnership moving forward.
Sincerely,
Estevan R. Lopez,
Commissioner.
____
From the Office of Senator Dianne Feinstein, Dec. 9, 2016
Re Drought language savings clause
Savings language
The drought language included in the Water Resources and
Development Act of 2016 contains a comprehensive savings
clause. The savings clause states that nothing in this
legislation overrides, modifies, or amends, the Endangered
Species Act or the relevant provisions of the smelt and
salmonid biological opinion that govern the coordinated
operations of the Central Valley Project and the State Water
Project, located in California.
In fact, the Interior Department (responsible for
developing and implementing the smelt biological opinion) and
the Commerce Department (responsible for developing and
implementing the salmonid biological opinion) drafted
sections that govern impacts to these endangered species. The
intention behind three years of work with the federal
agencies responsible for enforcing the Endangered Species Act
was clear: To prohibit any federal agency, under any
administration, from taking any action that would violate the
Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C.
[[Page S6967]]
Sec. Sec. 1531-1544 (2012) or the relevant biological
opinions.
That the Act is to be implemented in a manner that complies
with the protections within the Endangered Species Act is
highlighted by a June 27, 2016 letter from the Commissioner
of Reclamation. In that letter, the Commissioner states the
savings clause and other environmental protections contained
in S. 2533 (upon which this savings clause was based) ``leads
me to conclude that the directives in the legislation are to
be implemented in a manner consistent with the ESA and the
current biological opinions for the federal and state
projects.''
To make clear this legislation's goal of consistency with
the Endangered Species Act and biological opinions, each
individual section of the bill likewise requires consistency
with the environmental laws and biological opinions. These
protections are referenced no less than thirty-six times
throughout the bill.
The argument that a savings clause--of the kind that is
routinely included in bills passed by Congress--may be
rendered ineffective by more specific provisions of an act
misses the mark. As a general matter, the Supreme Court has
made clear that it will take its guidance from a ``common-
sense view'' of the language of the savings clause itself.
And the language here is unmistakable and clear: Nothing in
the Act ``overrides, modifies, or amends the applicability of
the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.)
or the application of the smelt and salmonid biological
opinions to the operation of the Central Valley Project or
the State Water Project.''
In fact, the Supreme Court concluded that language in a
savings clause worded almost identically to the clause in S.
2533 did, in fact, govern in the event of conflicts between
the act and already-existing legal standards. The statute
there made clear that nothing in the act could be construed
to ``modify, impair, or supersede'' the applicability of
antitrust laws and any other federal, state, or local law.
That reading led the Court to the logical conclusion that
nothing in the act (much like the language here) could be
read to alter already-existing standards (the analogue here
would be the biological opinions and the ESA).
Moreover, the argument for applying the savings language to
each individual provision of the bill is even stronger in
this case, because each individual provision repeats the same
environmental protections. Rather than conflicting, the
savings language and the individual sections reflect the same
intent: that any action implementing the bill must be
consistent with the environmental laws, including the ESA and
the biological opinions.
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. In fact, the savings clause here is drafted to be
nearly identical to the savings clause in a case called Verizon
Communication v. Trinko. This is a Supreme Court case in which the
Court took a commonsense view of the same clause as we have in this
bill and concluded that clause prevented any modification to existing
law.
I also want to talk about process. The bill before you today is the
result of 3 years of painstaking and public work. I first introduced a
version of this bill in July of 2015. That bill received significant
public input, including a Senate energy committee hearing last October.
Based on feedback, I revised that bill and then circulated a public
discussion draft in December of that year. We incorporated feedback
from a variety of stakeholders, including environmentalists, water
districts, and State and Federal agencies. We made dozens of changes.
Incorporating all of this, I then introduced a revised bill in
February of 2016. That revised bill received a second Senate hearing in
the committee in May. The administration testified at that time that
the bill complied with the Endangered Species Act and relevant
biological opinions.
The short-term operational provisions in this bill are largely the
same as the bill I introduced in February. We also made the savings
clause and environmental protections even stronger, referencing them no
fewer than 36 times. I truly believe the long-term provision, as well
as the environmental protections, would not be included in any bill
under a Congress that we might expect in the future.
While the short-term provisions will alleviate some suffering, I
believe that the most important part of the bill is actually the long-
term section. In California, we have depended on a water system that is
overallocated and overstressed. I want to explain that.
We have two big water systems. One is the State water system, put
forward by Governor Pat Brown in the middle 1960s, when California had
16 million people. The other is the Central Valley Water Project,
bonded and paid for by agriculture water contractors. That was put
forward in the 1930s.
By census, California today is 39.1 million people, and the number of
undocumented in addition to that is estimated to be 2.5 million. I
often say, and it is conservative, the State today is 40 million people
with a water infrastructure created when we were 16 million people.
To address the demands of a growing population and changing climate,
we have long-term provisions that include $550 million in
authorizations for programs, including fish and wildlife protection,
desalination, storage, recycling, and water grant programs. Over the
course of 3 years of work, we heard the concerns of many people about
the loss of salmon. And I've been told that the pumps actually were not
to blame for the high mortality rates of salmon in the past 2 years. In
fact, only 56 out of an allowable 1,017 salmon were caught at these
pumps. I said I was disappointed. The word is surprised. The problem
has been a malfunctioning cold water valve at Shasta Dam that meant
there was not enough cold water for fish in the Sacramento River.
According to NOAA Fisheries, these mistakes resulted in a salmon kill
of 95 percent in 2014 and a salmon kill of 98 percent in 2015. Of the
$150 million in the energy and water appropriations I have acquired the
past two years, we have used some to fix this problem and Shasta, in
addition to other infrastructure problems. We also have $43 million of
environmentally beneficial bills, some of which can be used to make
sure we avoid a devastating loss to salmon.
Let me tell you what that $43 million includes: $15 million for
habitat restoration projects, $15 million for fish passage projects, $3
million for a long-wanted delta smelt distribution study requested by
Fish and Wildlife, and a program to reduce predator fish. Let me tell
you what a big problem that is in the delta. People add predator fish
such as striped bass to be able to encourage a fishing industry. The
smelt go where the turbid waters are. The fishing magazines say if you
want to catch fish, go to the turbid water. So fishermen go to the
places where the striped bass are feeding on the endangered species.
Additionally, in this bill, we have money to eliminate what has been a
huge growth of water hyacinth, which drain the nutrients from the
water.
I would also say we have about a dozen sewage treatment plants that
put millions of gallons of 1.75 million gallons of ammonia per year
into the delta. The delta is a troubled place, and let there be no
doubt about it. There are a lot of islands, there is farming, and the
soil is peat. When the levees leak, the peat soil goes into the delta,
throws off trihalomethanes, and pollutes the water further.
We add $10 million to connect important wildlife refuges to sources
of water, and the bill also includes $515 million that can go to a new
kind of water infrastructure for California.
This includes $30 million for design and construction of desalination
plants. These projects actually do work. What I am told is what we need
to secure is a third-generation membrane because the energy coefficient
of desal has been negative. With a third-generation membrane, you can
turn that deficit into a positive coefficient.
The bill also includes $335 million for storage and groundwater
projects. The only way we will be able to weather future droughts is by
holding water in wet years for dry years, and that means more storage,
including groundwater storage. We have money in there for WaterSMART,
and this will help fund water supply and conservation. We have $50
million included for the existing Colorado River System Conservation
Program. To date, this popular program has resulted in 80,000 acre-feet
of water saved throughout the West, including through projects in
Arizona, California, Nevada, Colorado, and Wyoming.
I wish to address my colleagues' concerns that this bill will allow
the next administration to build dams all over the country without any
congressional approval, and this is simply not true. Let me set the
record straight about how storage projects work under this bill. The
drought language here gives Congress veto authority through control of
appropriations for any storage project. This means that reclamation
will do the same rigorous studies it has
[[Page S6968]]
always done, including feasibility studies and environmental impact
statements.
Reclamation would then submit a list of recommended projects to
Congress, and Congress would decide how to fund them. If Congress has
concerns, it doesn't fund the project. It is that simple. This will
allow Federal funding to go to qualified, environmentally mitigated,
and cost-beneficial projects on the same timeframe as projects funded
under the California State water bond. That is just common sense,
making sure the Federal Government partners with States such as
California to ensure the best projects get funding but only with
Congress's approval.
It was said on this floor that groundwater projects are the best
solution for California water problems, and this bill helps build those
groundwater projects. Again, this proposal made so much sense 1 year
ago that my colleague from California cosponsored the measure.
Moreover, this is not the Federal Government building projects that
States and local governments oppose. To the contrary, the bill sets up
a process where the Federal Government can contribute up to 25 percent
of the cost of projects built by States or local agencies in
collaboration with a broad range of local agencies.
The Federal Government cannot contribute more than 25 percent of the
cost. They have to work with the States and local agencies that would
fund the rest.
This provision has also been the subject of two public hearings and
the Obama administration supported it.
The Obama administration stated the following in relationship to the
water storage programs in the bill at the May 26 hearing in the Energy
Committee:
We are finding that State and local jurisdictions are
developing their own funding for many of these types of
projects and would like to have a federal partner but are
unable to wait for an authorization for Reclamation to
participate in such a project. Consequently, we are of the
view that in addition to the traditional Reclamation paradigm
for study, authorization, then participation in federal water
projects, Congress should revisit a standing authorization
that allows some kind of investment in the state and local
projects as contemplated.
I want to talk about the offsets on the bill. On this floor, it has
been said that this is a sweetheart deal that would cost the taxpayers
billions of dollars, and that is simply flatly untrue.
In fact, the CBO budget office has said that the bill will save
Treasury $558 million, and that is the truth.
As I said, California is home to more than 40 million people and our
major water infrastructure hasn't been significantly changed in the
past 50 years when we had 16 million. We must modernize the system,
both the infrastructure and operational flexibility, or I fear we risk
eventually becoming a desert State.
To the best of our ability, we have addressed concerns raised by
environmentalists, water districts, Federal and State agencies, and the
ag sector. This bill has bipartisan support in both Houses, and I
believe these provisions will place California on a long-term path to
drought resiliency.
I wish to say thank you. A lot of people have had a very hard time
through this drought. It is my hope that we can get this bill passed
and then, on a bipartisan basis, this Congress, both Senate and House,
can see that we do what we can to abate this drought and also begin to
build a new water infrastructure in California.
I thank the Chair.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record as follows:
California Drought Relief
SUPPORT FOR PROVISION IN WATER RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT ACT OF 2016
SUPPORT FOR DROUGHT PROVISION IN WRDA 2016
Endorsed Bill & Voted for Final Passage
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy,
Rep. John Garamendi (D-CA3),
Rep. Jim Costa (D-CA16),
Rep. Ken Calvert (R-CA42),
Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA22),
Rep. David G. Valadao (R-CA21),
Rep. Douglas LaMalfa (R-CA1),
Rep. Tom McClintock (R-CA4),
Rep. Darrell E. Issa (R-CA49),
Rep. Mimi Walters (R-CA45),
Rep. Stephen Knight (R-CA25),
Rep. Edward R. Royce (R-CA39),
Rep. Paul Cook (R-CA8),
Rep. Jeff Denham (R-CA10),
Rep. Scott H. Peters (D-CA52).
Letters of Support & Press Releases
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California,
Ducks Unlimited,
California Waterfowl Association,
City of Fresno,
City of Pasadena,
Water Infrastructure Network,
San Francisco Public Utilities Commission,
Gateway Cities Council of Governments (list of members
available at <a href='http://www.gatewaycog.org/gateway/who-we-are/
member-agency-contacts'>http://www.gatewaycog.org/gateway/who-we-are/
member-agency-contacts</a>),
Southern California Association of Governments (list of
members available at <a href='https://www.scag.ca.gov/about/Pages/
members.aspx'>https://www.scag.ca.gov/about/Pages/
members.aspx</a>),
Association of California Water Agencies (list of members
available at http://www.acwa.com/membership/directory).
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I stayed on the floor and listened to all
of the remarks of the senior Senator from California. While doing that,
we did some checking. My staff informs me that probably this bill has
more benefits for the State of California than any bill since I have
been here for 22 years so I think it is very important the people
understand that if for some reason this bill doesn't pass, none of the
things, the provisions the Senator was talking about, will happen so it
is very significant.
Since we are going to have a vote on a continuing resolution, I think
at this point we need to make sure our government does not shut down.
It is very important that it not shut down right in the middle of--
arguably, three wars--but that could be as late as 1 a.m. tomorrow
morning. After that is when we will be considering the WRDA bill. That
is the Water Resources Development Act. It is one of which I am very
proud, as the current chairman of the Environment and Public Works
Committee, to be involved in this bill that has been so eloquently
described by Senator Feinstein.
For the last several months, our committee has been working to put
together the final WRDA package with our counterparts in the House,
actually, the House Energy and Commerce, the House T&I Committee, and
the Natural Resources Committee of the House. This legislation is truly
a win for America. While we just heard of many things that be of
benefit for the State of California, there is not one State that
doesn't have benefits there. They are long overdue and coming from this
legislation.
WRDA authorizes 30 new navigation, flood control, and environmental
restoration projects and modifies eight existing projects based on
reports submitted to Congress by the Secretary of the Army. These
projects support our Nation's economic competitiveness and our well-
being by deepening nationally significant ports, providing protection
from disastrous floodwaters, and restoring valuable ecosystems.
Let me just list a few: the Little Diomede Harbor and Craig Harbor in
Alaska, the Upper Ohio River in Pennsylvania, Port Everglades in
Florida, and 17 flood control and hurricane protection projects in
California, Florida, Mississippi, New Jersey, Illinois, Wisconsin, and
Oregon. This bill also includes ecosystem restoration in the Florida
Everglades, which will fix Lake Okeechobee and stop algae blooms on the
Florida coast.
The bill also includes ongoing flood control and navigation safety in
the Hamilton City project in California, the Rio de Flag project in
Arizona, and in critical fixes for the Houston Ship Channel. The bill
includes programs to help small and disadvantaged communities provide
safe drinking water and will help communities address drinking water
emergencies, such as the one facing the city of Flint, MI.
Let's ensure that we all understand that without the authorization of
this bill, there will be no Flint relief. That is very important. I
want to repeat that. People don't seem to understand. There is a lot of
support in this Chamber to try to help out with the problems, the
disasters that took place in Flint, MI, so we have a relief package
that is included in this bill, but if the bill for some reason doesn't
pass, there will be no relief for Flint, MI.
The House has voted to authorize Flint funding in the WRDA bill and
spending in the continuing resolution. Both of these bills provide the
benefit for Flint, MI, passed by over a three-fourths majority. We
could not have worked closer with Senator Stabenow
[[Page S6969]]
and Senator Peters to ensure we keep relief for Flint. I appreciate
their partnership and their persistence. They were very persistent,
because these provisions were in here before, but the relief is
delivered. But if for some reason the bill doesn't pass, Flint gets
nothing, and people have to understand that. We could not have had a
closer working relationship with Senator Stabenow and Senator Peters,
and I really appreciate the fact that we all worked together to
accomplish this one thing. There is unanimity, and that is help for
Flint, MI.
The bill includes the Gold King Mine spill recovery. This section,
championed by Senators Gardner, Bennet, and Udall, requires EPA to
reduce costs incurred by States, tribes, and local governments to
respond to the Gold King Mine spill.
This bill includes rehabilitation of high-hazard potential dams. This
section of the bill authorizes FEMA assistance to States to
rehabilitate unsafe dams. There are 14,726 high-hazard potential dams
in the United States. What that means is--the definition means that if
a dam fails, lives are at stake. So the program will prevent loss of
lives.
The WRDA bill is bipartisan. It will play a critical role in
addressing problems faced by communities, States, and our country as a
whole.
Earlier this week, Senator Boxer said that the House Republicans
ruined a beautiful bill because some of them ``wanted to flex their
muscles.'' I don't know about that, but I do agree with her that this
is a beautiful bill because it does things that we haven't had the
courage to get done before, so we want to make sure it passes.
The House passed the WRDA bill with the drought provisions by a
three-fourth vote--360 votes. I can't think of another time the House
has passed something with 360 votes. But that is the popularity of this
WRDA bill and all the work that has gone into it.
However, there is something I don't think anyone has heard. This
drought provision was drafted by the U.S. Department of the Interior
and the U.S. Department of Commerce. The savings clause prohibits any
Federal agency under any administration from taking any action that
would violate any environmental laws, including the Endangered Species
Act and biological opinions. Don't just take my word for it; ask
Senator Feinstein. She articulated this very well. People have to
realize that this came from the Department of the Interior and the
Department of Commerce; it was not just stuck in there by the
committee.
We have heard claims that these operational provisions would violate
environmental laws. Let's look at the actual text. Under this section
4001, any operations to provide additional water supplies can only be
implemented if they are consistent with the applicable biological
opinions and only if the environmental effects are consistent with
effects allowed under the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act,
and the California Water Quality Control Act.
Section 4002 and section 4003 reiterate the requirement to comply
with the smelt biological opinion and the salmon biological opinion.
Senator Feinstein also covered that.
Finally, section 4012 includes a savings clause--a savings clause
written by the U.S. Department of the Interior and the Department of
Commerce--that ensures that the entire subtitle must be implemented in
accordance with the Endangered Species Act or the smelt and salmon
biological opinions.
So that is significant. I think that documents well enough that all
of these environmental provisions are complied with.
How I would rather spend my time on the floor is talking about the
positive things in the bill because there is much more to say. Coal ash
State permitting is something that has been desired for a long period
of time. It is finally allowed in this bill. SPCC--that is, spill
relief--for our Nation's small farmers is included thanks to Senator
Fischer. And that provision is not just good for her State, it is
certainly good for my State of Oklahoma. To say that this violates
environmental law and regulations is simply not the case.
Many Senators have contributed to this piece of legislation, and
there is literally crucial infrastructure and accomplishments in every
State contained in this bill.
Let me just repeat--it is very important because there has been a lot
of discussion about what has happened in Michigan. If the bill is not
passed, Flint, MI, gets nothing.
I was going to talk about some of the other provisions in the bill,
but since there is some concern expressed by one of the Senators from
Washington State, I want to mention--just Washington State; I won't
mention anything more about California because Senator Feinstein has
already done that. But in Washington State, for the Skokomish River,
Mason County, WA, the bill authorizes $20.26 million to remove a levy,
which has the economic benefit of restoring 40 miles for salmon habitat
and for the fishing industry. So the fishing industry--for those
concerned with the salmon, this is a huge thing for them.
For Puget Sound, the bill authorizes $461 million to provide refuge
habitat for 3 listed species and 10 threatened species, including 5
species of Pacific salmon. The project is part of the Puget Sound
Chinook Salmon Recovery Plan. It is in this bill for Washington State.
The Columbia River ecosystem restoration. The bill increases the
authorization ceiling for ecosystem restoration studies and projects
for the lower Columbia River in Oregon and in Washington State,
authorized by section 536 of our WRDA bill that we passed in 2000.
Watercraft inspection stations, Columbia River Basin. The bill
clarifies that the watercraft inspection stations to protect the
Columbia River Basin from invasive species may be located outside the
basin if that is necessary to prevent introduction of invasive species.
Again, Washington State.
Tribal assistance. This bill authorizes relocation assistance to
Indian families displaced due to the construction of the Bonneville Dam
and requires a study of Indian families displaced due to the
construction of the John Day Dam and the development of a plan to
provide relocation assistance associated with that dam.
Additional measures at donor ports and energy transfer ports. This
section permanently extends the authority to provide additional funds
for donor ports and energy transfer ports.
Harbor deepening. The bill aligns the cost share for construction of
harbors with the change in WRDA 2014 modifying the cost-share for
maintenance of harbors--a huge thing, and it is certainly of great
benefit for the State of Washington.
Implementation guidance. The bill requires the Corps to issue
guidance to implement section 2107 of WRDA 2014 relating to maintenance
of emerging ports and Great Lakes ports.
Columbia River ecosystem restoration. The bill increases the
authorization ceiling for ecosystem restorations studies and projects
for the lower Columbia River in Oregon and Washington, authorized in
section 536 of WRDA 2014, the last WRDA that we passed.
Watercraft inspection stations, Columbia River Basin. This bill
clarifies that the watercraft inspection stations to protect the
Columbia River Basin from invasive species may be located outside of
the basin if that is necessary to prevent introduction of invasive
species.
The oyster aquacultural study requires the GAO to study the different
regulatory treatment of oyster hatcheries across the Corps districts.
Everything I have mentioned was in Washington State. I could go State
by State, but there certainly isn't the time.
I would remind my colleagues that the next vote that takes place that
everyone has been concerned about is going to pass, and it is going to
pass to stop us from having to shut down the government. But after that
is when we are going to bring up the bill that we have been talking
about all day today that the Senator from California was talking about,
and it is something that--I know we have only been working on it for
about a year, but we have been working on some of the projects in there
for as long as 3 years.
This is a chance to get it all done. If something happens and we
don't do it, none of the stuff we are talking about is going to take
place. Certainly all of the efforts that Senator Stabenow, Senator
Peters, and I have spoken
[[Page S6970]]
about in Michigan--the problems they are having up there--that is not
going to happen; there is no help for Flint, MI. I have no reason to
believe it is not going to pass. I believe it is. But I have to stress
the significance of this legislation.
With that, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Boozman). The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Coal Miners Benefits
Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, I come to the floor today to support
Senators from both parties and in particular West Virginia Senators Joe
Manchin and Shelley Capito in their fight to protect health and
retirement benefits for over 100,000 American coal miners and their
families.
Seventy years ago, the Federal Government made a simple promise to
these union coal miners: America--our country--promised to provide
health insurance and retirement benefits to miners who went down in
those mines and put their lives at risk to power this great Nation.
We recognize that this was dangerous work, but we believed it was
essential to our economic growth and the national security of our
country, and because of that belief, we promised that if these men
would go down into the mines, our country would make sure they have
some protection in case of injury, disability, or death. We promised
that after a lifetime of backbreaking work, they would have a dignified
and secure retirement. And we promised that if the worst happened, that
their wives, their widows, and their families would still be provided
for.
When the American Government made this deal with the United Mine
Workers of America 70 years ago, coal generated more than 50 percent of
our power. Today, coal generates only about 30 percent of our power.
Coal prices have plummeted and other sources of energy, like natural
gas, have become cheaper and more prevalent.
Automation has also transformed this industry, and there are critical
environmental reasons to transition, but make no mistake, these changes
have drastically altered the coal industry and have left thousands of
coal miners out of work. Every month there are more reports of coal
companies filing for bankruptcy, and the layoffs are never far behind.
More than 25,000 miners have lost their jobs in the last 5 years alone.
As a country, we all benefited from the decades of work put in by
coal miners. Every Member of Congress and everybody we represent back
home, we benefited from the work of the coal miners. We made a deal to
keep these men in the mines, and now we must honor the commitments we
made.
Congress is on the verge of turning out the lights and going home for
the rest of the year, but 100,000 coal miners face a reckoning. If
Congress does not act, more than 16,000 mine workers will lose their
health insurance by the end of this month, another 2,500 coal miners
will lose their coverage by March, by July another 4,000 miners will be
without insurance, and on and on and on. This is not right.
Losing health insurance is tough for anyone, but for coal miners it
is a killer--literally. Coal miners face far higher rates of
cardiopulmonary disease, cancer, black lung, and other injuries than
most other Americans. They need their insurance.
Our coal miners knew what they were getting into. They knew they were
taking on work that was dangerous and risky to their health. That is
why they fought so hard for guaranteed health coverage, and that is why
they gave up a portion of their paycheck every month, month after
month, year after year, to pay for it.
It is not just health care coverage. About 90,000 miners and their
families will also soon lose their guaranteed monthly pension benefits.
These benefits aren't some Cadillac deal. The average monthly benefit
for these mine workers is about $586, about $7,000 per year for their
retirement. Now, that doesn't sound like much, and let's be honest, it
isn't much, but for thousands and thousands of retired miners and their
families, Social Security and these $586 payments are all they have to
show for a lifetime of going into those mines. We cannot back out on
our promises.
There is bipartisan legislation written and ready to go to fix this
problem. It would not add a dime to the deficit. We could pass it right
now, today. The Senators who serve here come from every corner of the
country. We don't agree on everything, and I certainly don't agree on
every issue with Senator Manchin or Senator Capito, but I don't
understand how anyone can disagree with this.
A lot has changed in 70 years, but the fact that America makes good
on its promises to American workers is one thing that should never
change--and we should not leave here until this Congress makes good on
America's 70-year-old promise to our miners.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah.
Attorney General Nomination
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, before the 114th Congress adjourns, I want
to take a moment to put on the record my strong support for the
nomination of our distinguished colleague, Senator Jeff Sessions of
Alabama, to be the next Attorney General of the United States.
Thomas Jefferson once wrote, ``The most sacred of the duties of a
government [is] to do equal and impartial justice to all its
citizens.''
This idea was also reflected in the Justice Department's own mission
statement, which I have here: ``To enforce the law and defend the
interests of the United States according to the law; to ensure public
safety against threats foreign and domestic; to provide federal
leadership in preventing and controlling crime; to seek just punishment
for those guilty of unlawful behavior; and to ensure fair and impartial
administration for all Americans.''
No one believes in this mission more and no one understands better
what this mission requires than Jeff Sessions.
Unfortunately, the Justice Department has lost its way, becoming
partial rather than impartial, political rather than independent, and
partisan rather than objective. The Justice Department has enabled the
executive branch's campaign to exceed its constitutional power while
ignoring Congress's proper and legitimate role of oversight.
This decline undermines the American people's trust in government.
According to the Pew Research Center, public trust in government is at
a record low. Fewer than one in five say they trust government most of
the time. Reversing this decline and rebuilding this trust will require
getting back to the essential ingredients in the Justice Department's
mission and its mission statement.
Senator Sessions will bring more hands-on experience to the
leadership of the Justice Department than any of the 83 men and women
who have occupied the post of Attorney General. He was a Federal
prosecutor for 18 years, 12 of them as U.S. attorney. He has also
served on the Senate Judiciary Committee since he was first elected two
decades ago. In other words, he has been directly involved in both the
development and implementation of criminal justice policy, a
combination unmatched by any Attorney General since the office was
created in 1789. His service in this body and on the committee of
jurisdiction over the Department is especially important because a
respectful and productive working relationship with Congress has never
been more important.
No one knows more what the Office of Attorney General requires than
those who have actually served in that office. I have a letter signed
by 10 former Attorneys General and Deputy Attorneys General who have
served over the past three decades. I ask unanimous consent that this
letter be printed in the Record following my remarks.
Some of these officials knew and worked with Senator Sessions when he
was U.S. attorney, others since he joined us in the Senate. They all
share the same conclusion: ``All of us know him as a person of honesty
and integrity, who has held himself to the highest ethical standards
throughout his
[[Page S6971]]
career, and is guided always by a deep and abiding sense of duty to
this nation and its founding charter.'' I think that is really true,
and these 10 former leaders have said so. I ask my colleagues on both
sides of the aisle whether there is a better description of the kind of
person we want in public office, generally, and leading the Justice
Department, in particular.
Let me say a word about Senator Sessions' work on the Judiciary
Committee. I worked with him in that capacity for 20 years, including
when he served as the ranking member. We have worked together on dozens
of bills to improve forensic science services for law enforcement, to
promote community policing, help child abuse victims, and prevent gun
crimes. He is a serious legislator who knows that prosecutors and law
enforcement need commonsense workable policies from lawmakers to help
keep communities safe and protect the rights of all Americans.
I also received a letter from a bipartisan group of eight men and
women who have served as Director of National Drug Control Policy or as
Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration. I ask unanimous
consent that this letter appear in the Record following leader remarks.
Here is what they say:
His distinguished career as a prosecutor . . . earned him a
reputation as a tough, determined professional who has been
dedicated to the appropriate enforcement of the rule of law.
His exemplary record of service in law enforcement
demonstrates that he is the protector of civil rights and
defender of crime victims.
Again, I ask my colleagues whether there is a better description of
the kind of leader America needs at the Justice Department. I ask my
colleagues on both sides of the aisle, Who would have a better
informed, more comprehensive knowledge of Senator Sessions' fitness to
be Attorney General?
Before I conclude, I want to address what is already shaping up to be
an ugly propaganda offensive against this fine nominee--this fine
person--whom I know very well and have served with virtually every day
for the last 20 years.
I have served in this body under both Republican and Democratic
Presidents, under both Republican and Democratic Senate leadership. I
have actively participated in the confirmation process for 12 Attorneys
General, in both parties, and have seen before the tactics that are
already being used in a vain attempt to undermine this nomination.
The critics do not challenge Senator Sessions' qualifications. They
can't. Instead, they traffic in rumor, innuendo, and--I hate to say
it--smear tactics. They take a comment here, a decision there from
years or even decades in the past and use their media allies to
transform these bits and pieces into what appear to be full-fledged
stories--and they are not. They are counting on people not knowing the
whole story. Such a cynical, dishonest campaign. It is not about the
truth or fairly evaluating the President-elect's nominee to be Attorney
General. And it is despicable, and it is beneath the dignity of us here
in the U.S. Senate.
To be honest, these tactics are really not about Senator Sessions at
all but about the power of those who are using these tactics. They have
to mark their territory, flex their muscle, and show that they are
still a force to be reckoned with. If such things as fairness,
integrity, truth, and decency have to be sacrificed in that power
struggle, so be it, I guess.
I hope my colleagues will not only resist these tactics but that they
will join me in exposing and rejecting them. They degrade the Senate,
they mislead our fellow citizens, and they corrode our democracy. Let's
stay focused on our role here, which is to evaluate whether the
President-elect's nominee is qualified. We know that he is. We know
that he is superbly qualified and that he will be a strong and
principled leader for the Justice Department.
In closing, I want to quote from that letter by bipartisan drug
policy officials. They say this about Senator Sessions:
His prudent and responsible approach is exactly what the
Department of Justice needs to enforce the law, restore
confidence in the United States' justice system, and keep the
American people safe. We support the nomination of Senator
Sessions to be Attorney General of the United States, and we
ask you to do the same.
I could not have said it better.
I have known Jeff for 20 years now, every year he served here, and I
knew him before then. I remember the despicable way he was treated many
years ago as a nominee. I don't want to see that repeated, and I
personally will hold accountable anybody who tries to repeat it.
Jeff Sessions is a wonderful man. He is a good person. Even though
any one of us here may have some disagreements from time to time with
policy--we do with each other--that doesn't denigrate and shouldn't
denigrate him as a decent, honorable man who deserves to be Attorney
General of the United States.
I am very proud of Donald Trump doing this, giving this really fine
man an opportunity to serve, and I believe he will straighten out the
Department of Justice to be the Department that it should be, that we
all want it to be. I think it will elevate the Department of Justice in
ways that it hasn't been in many of the years I have been in the U.S.
Senate. That is not to denigrate everybody who has served in the
Department of Justice. But let's face it--it has been used politically
by both parties at times for no good reason. I will tell you this: Jeff
Sessions will make sure that will not be the case, and that will be a
pleasant change from what we have had in the past in some
administrations, Republican and Democratic.
I have a strong knowledge of his background. I have a strong feeling
about Jeff as a person. I believe he will be a great Attorney General,
and I hope our colleagues on both sides of the aisle treat him with
respect as he goes through this nomination process. If we do, we will
be able to walk out of here at least with some sense of pride that we
did what was right.
I think you will find, as Jeff serves--and he is going to serve--as
he serves in the Justice Department, he will do a very good job, and it
will be a job done for everybody in America and not just Republicans
and not just for the new administration that is coming in, but for
everybody. That is what I think you will find from Jeff Sessions. He is
a tough guy. He has the ability to stand up. He has the ability do what
is right, and he will do it. I have great confidence in Jeff.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
December 5, 2016.
Hon. Charles E. Grassley,
U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Dirksen Senate Office
Building, Washington, DC.
Hon. Dianne G. Feinstein,
U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Dirksen Senate Office
Building, Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Grassley and Ranking Member Feinstein: The
signers of this letter served in the Department of Justice in
the positions listed next to their names and, in connection
with that service, came to know Senator Jeff Sessions through
his oversight of the Department as a member of the Judiciary
Committee or in his work as U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of Alabama. All of us worked with him; several of us
testified before him during his service on your Committee.
All of us know him as a person of honesty and integrity, who
has held himself to the highest ethical standards throughout
his career, and is guided always by a deep and abiding sense
of duty to this nation and its founding charter.
Based on our collective and extensive experience, we also
know him to be a person of unwavering dedication to the
mission of the Department--to assure that our country is
governed by the fair and even-handed rule of law. For
example, Senator Sessions has been intimately involved in
assuring that even as the Department combats the scourge of
illegal drugs, the penalties imposed on defendants do not
unfairly impact minority communities. He has worked
diligently to empower the Department to do its part in
defending the nation against those intent on destroying our
way of life, adhering throughout to bedrock legal principles
and common sense.
Senator Sessions' career as a federal prosecutor also has
provided him with the necessary institutional knowledge,
expertise, and deep familiarity with the issues that confront
the Department, insofar as it is an army in the field. As the
United States Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama,
Senator Sessions worked hard to protect vulnerable victims,
particularly children. He carried this commitment to the
Senate, where he championed legislation to provide the
Department with the tools it needs to fight online child
pornography, to close rogue internet pharmacies that have
contributed to the opioid epidemic, and to end sexual assault
in prison.
[[Page S6972]]
Senator Sessions' career, both as a United States Attorney
and as a Senator, well prepares him for the role of Attorney
General. In sum, Senator Sessions is superbly qualified by
temperament, intellect, and experience, to serve as this
nation's chief law enforcement officer. We urge his swift
confirmation.
Sincerely,
John D. Ashcroft, Attorney General, 2001-2005;
Alberto R. Gonzales, Attorney General, 2005-2007;
Michael B. Mukasey, Attorney General, 2007-2009;
Mark R. Filip, Deputy Attorney General, 2008-2009;
Paul J. McNulty, Deputy Attorney General, 2006-2007;
Larry D. Thompson, Deputy Attorney General, 2001-2003;
William P. Barr, Attorney General, 1991-1993, Deputy
Attorney General, 1990-1991;
Edwin Meese, III, Attorney General, 1985-1988;
Craig S. Morford, Deputy Attorney General, 2007-2008
(Acting);
George J. Terwilliger III, Deputy Attorney General,
1991-1993.
____
December 5, 2016.
Hon. Mitch McConnell,
Majority Leader, U.S. Senate, Washington, DC.
Hon. Chuck Schumer,
Minority Leader, 115th Congress, U.S. Senate, Washington, DC.
Hon. Chuck Grassley,
Chairman, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Hon. Patrick Leahy,
Ranking Member, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Re Nomination of Senator Jeff Sessions to be Attorney General
of the United States.
Dear Leader McConnell, Senator Schumer, Chairman Grassley,
and Ranking Member Leahy: As you prepare for the upcoming
Congress and for the impending nominations of President-elect
Trump's Cabinet members, we write to express our strong
support for the nomination of Senator Jeff Sessions to be
Attorney General of the United States. Senator Sessions'
exemplary record during his long career in public service
speaks to the leadership and sober dedication he would bring
to the Department of Justice.
As former government officials involved in the development
and administration of the United States' drug policies, we
understand the importance of a Department of Justice that is
committed to the just and fair enforcement of the laws that
Congress has written. In this respect, Senator Sessions would
make an excellent Attorney General. His distinguished career
as a prosecutor, including as the Reagan-appointed U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of Alabama and as Attorney
General of Alabama, earned him a reputation as a tough,
determined professional who has been dedicated to the
appropriate enforcement of the rule of law. His exemplary
record of service in law enforcement demonstrates that he is
a protector of civil rights and defender of crime victims.
Senator Sessions brought that same dedication to his
service in the Senate. As an example of his fair-minded
approach to tough law enforcement, he, together with Senator
Durbin, passed the bipartisan Fair Sentencing Act, which
increased fairness in sentencing by reducing the disparity in
crack cocaine and powder cocaine sentences, while also
strengthening penalties for serious drug traffickers. His
prudent and responsible approach is exactly what the
Department of Justice needs to enforce the law, restore
confidence in the United States' justice system, and keep the
American people safe. We support the nomination of Senator
Sessions to be Attorney General of the United States, and we
ask you to do the same.
Respectfully,
William J. Bennett, Director of National Drug Control
Policy, March 1989-December 1990;
Robert Martinez, Director of National Drug Control
Policy, March 1991-January 1993;
John P. Walters, Director of National Drug Control
Policy, December 2001-January 2009;
Peter B. Bensinger, Administrator, Drug Enforcement
Administration, February 1976-July 1981;
John C. Lawn, Administrator, Drug Enforcement
Administration, July 1985-March 1990;
Robert C. Bonner, Administrator, Drug Enforcement
Administration, August 1990-October 1993;
Karen Tandy, Administrator, Drug Enforcement
Administration, July 2003-November 2007;
Michele Leonhart, Administrator, Drug Enforcement
Administration, December 2010-May 2015.
114th Congress
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, as we approach the end of the 114th
Congress, many here in the Senate have been taking the time to reflect
on what we have been able to accomplish and, more importantly, plan for
what we hope to be able to accomplish in the near future.
This was a tumultuous 2 years for our country, punctuated by a fierce
and unpredictable political campaign and results that were, to some,
beyond surprising.
Before the start of the 114th Congress, the Senate had for years been
languishing in partisan gridlock. Very little got done around here, and
far too often, we spent our time fighting out the political sound bites
of the day and voting on whatever partisan issue happened to be
grabbing headlines.
While some of my friends on the other side of the aisle have
attempted to argue otherwise, the Senate has been remarkably productive
during the 114th Congress. And that goes far beyond just a list of
bills we have been available to pass. The Senate has changed in ways
that numbers really can't quantify. For example, committees in the
Senate have functioned more effectively than in the past. The debates
on the Senate floor have been fuller and fairer than they were before.
And, of course, the focus has returned to actually governing rather
than simply adding more noise to the political echo chamber.
Most astonishingly, given the tone of the country's overall political
discourse, most of the Senate's accomplishments have been bipartisan.
As I have noted on a number of occasions, the Senate Finance Committee,
which I have been privileged to chair for the past 2 years, has, to a
historic degree, been able to ride this new wave of bipartisan
productivity. In this Congress, our committee has reported 41 separate
bills, all of them bipartisan. These include priorities throughout the
committee's jurisdiction. That is remarkable. These weren't itty-bitty
bills; they were very important bills. That is remarkable. Honestly, I
wish I could take credit for it, but the success we have enjoyed has
been due to the work of every Senator on our committee. To a member,
they have all been committed to working on a bipartisan basis to move
ideas forward and produce results. We haven't agreed on everything,
that is for sure, but we found enough common ground that the desire to
work together has remained strong through this Congress.
I want to thank the members of our Finance Committee for their
efforts this year. They have all been exemplary colleagues to work
with. Even when we disagreed, we have had good discussions.
Today, I want to particularly thank Senator Coats, who is, as we
know, retiring at the end of this Congress. We will miss the senior
Senator from Indiana's stalwart presence on the Finance Committee and
in the Senate as a whole. I wish him the best of luck.
I want to take a moment to delve deeper into the substance of our
committee's work. Let me give the highlights or else we will be here
all day.
Early on in the 114th Congress, the Senate and the House passed
legislation produced in the Finance Committee to repeal and replace the
broken Medicare sustainable growth rate, or SGR, formula, putting an
end to the ritual of cobbling together the SGR patches at the last
minute behind closed doors. This bill was one of the most significant
bipartisan reforms enacted in the history of the Medicare Program.
We made once-in-a-generation advancements in U.S. trade policy by
renewing and updating trade promotion authority, reauthorizing vital
trade preferences programs, and modernizing our trade enforcement and
customs laws. All of these are important strides in the ongoing effort
to promote U.S. leadership in the world marketplace in order to benefit
our workers, our farmers, our ranchers, and inventors, just to mention
a few.
We acted decisively to prevent benefit cuts in Social Security
disability insurance and put into place the most significant
improvements to the Social Security system since the 1980s.
We came up with enough offsets to extend the life of the highway
trust fund for 5 years, something nobody thought we could do. That is
the longest such extension in nearly two decades. This was accomplished
despite the cries of naysayers who said it couldn't be done without a
massive tax increase. We did not increase taxes.
We also made serious strides to advance a number of the committee's
long-term improvements, including improvements to Medicare benefits for
patients dealing with chronic illnesses, overdue reforms to our
Nation's foster
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care system, a series of measures to protect taxpayers from the ever-
increasing threat of identity theft and tax refund fraud, and
legislation to help more Americans save adequately for retirement.
Not all of these measures have yet been signed into law, but in every
case we have been able to move the ball significantly forward.
In addition, we continued the Finance Committee's long tradition of
conducting robust and exhaustive oversight. Our bipartisan report on
the IRS targeting scandal, which we released last year, was a great
example.
In addition, the committee's work to shine a light on the inept
implementation of ObamaCare was second to none. And, of course, we made
real progress in the ongoing effort to reform our Nation's Tax Code.
I would like to talk about tax reform in a little more detail because
that has been the focus of so much of our efforts in this Congress, and
that is not likely to change when we gavel in the 115th Congress.
Among other things, the members of the Finance Committee produced a
number of bipartisan reports outlining the key challenges we face with
our Tax Code after working together in the tax reform working groups we
established last year. Also, the Finance Committee, working with our
leadership here in the Senate and our colleagues in the House, drafted
and facilitated passage of a massive tax bill that made permanent a
number of oft-expiring tax provisions, providing real certainty to
businesses and job creators and setting the stage for even more
significant reforms in the future. That bill also delayed a number of
ObamaCare's burdensome health care taxes.
In addition, I have spent much of the 114th Congress hard at work
developing a tax reform proposal to better integrate the corporate and
individual tax systems. Under current law, the United States not only
has the highest corporate tax rate in the industrialized world, we also
subject many of our businesses and the individuals who invest in them
to multiple levels of tax on what are essentially the same earnings.
This system results in a number of inequities and economic distortions,
including undue burdens on U.S. workers and incentives for businesses
to finance their operations with debt instead of equity.
These problems have troubled policymakers for years, particularly
recently as the combined effects of these misguided policies have
resulted in waves of corporate inversions and foreign takeovers of U.S.
companies.
This is a serious set of problems. My idea to address this problem
was relatively simple: Allow corporations to deduct from their taxable
earnings any dividend they distribute to shareholders. Currently, our
system taxes a business's earnings once at the company level--at an
astronomically high rate, no less--and again when the earnings are
distributed to shareholders. My proposal has been to eliminate one
level of taxation on these distributed earnings and require only a
shareholder-level tax on dividends, which is similar to the way debt is
treated. Forms of this proposal have been put forward by Treasury
Departments and congressional tax writers from both parties in the
past.
In addition to a dividends-paid deduction, in order to bring more
balance to the system and eliminate even more distortions, I have
looked for ways to equalize the tax treatment of debt and equity under
our system. Those monitoring the tax world undoubtedly know that I have
spent quite a long time working on this proposal, including a number of
months going over the numbers with the Joint Committee on Taxation. At
this point, I can say that the feedback I have received from JCT on
this matter has been very positive. For example, in its preliminary
assessments, JCT indicated that the proposal would increase economic
growth and activity relevant to current law. They found that it would
increase wages for U.S. workers through increased productivity. Their
analysis also showed that the proposal would increase capital
investment and reduce effective tax rates for American businesses.
Interestingly, JCT also found that the proposal would alleviate some of
the pressures that drive corporate inversions and help prevent erosion
of the U.S. tax base overall. It sounds pretty good, and it is true.
These concerns--economic growth, wages, and U.S. companies moving
offshore or being acquired by foreign companies--have a real-world
impact on American workers and employers, and they were at the heart of
this year's campaign debates. Thus far, the feedback we have received
shows that a dividends-paid deduction, combined with equalized tax
treatment for debt and equity, would help address these concerns. And
according to JCT, all of this could be done without adding to the
deficit or shifting more of the overall tax burden from those with
higher incomes to middle and lower income taxpayers.
I know the DC tax community has been speculating on this matter for a
while now, and I can attest today that the idea of better integrating
the corporate and individual tax systems through a dividends-paid
deduction wouldn't just work but could actually work very well. Once
again, the numbers we have seen thus far have been quite favorable.
I will note that we have heard some concerns from those in the
charitable and nonprofit community as well as retirement security and
stakeholders regarding the potential impact of equalizing the treatment
of debt and equity. I think my history in the Senate has demonstrated
pretty clearly my commitment to both charitable giving and retirement
security. I want to make clear that my staff and I are prepared to
address these kinds of concerns when this takes legislative form.
I suppose that for most of the people who have been monitoring our
efforts on corporate integration, their biggest question is about
timing: When will we try to move this for? After any big election
campaign, particularly after the one that was as unpredictable as the
one we saw in 2016--although I thought it was predictable, but most
people didn't--it is important to acknowledge the realities on the
ground.
I remain very interested in the concept of corporate integration and
continue to believe it would have a positive impact on our tax system
and our economy overall. Let's be honest, after this election, the
ground has shifted, and while we don't know how everything will play
out in the coming months, it is safe to assume that the tax reform
discussion is shifting as well. Right now, we are seeing more momentum
for comprehensive tax reform--that is reform that deals with both the
individual and business tax systems--than we have seen in a generation
or more. If we are going to do right by our economy and the American
people, we need to think in those comprehensive terms. At the very
least, I think it is fair to say that with the changing circumstances,
the assumptions and parameters that have, for some time now, governed
the tax reform debate will have to be modified, if not thrown out
entirely.
I believe corporate integration can and should be part of the
comprehensive tax reform discussion that appears to be on the horizon,
but given the current reality, any substantive tax reform proposal will
need to be considered and evaluated in the context of what has quickly
become a much broader discussion. Let me be clear: I am not walking
away from the idea of corporate integration. On the contrary. I am
excited to see how the debate over comprehensive tax reform plays out
in the near future and where this concept might fit in that broader
discussion.
Going forward, we have a real opportunity to make significant,
perhaps even fundamental, changes to our entire tax system in order to
encourage growth, create more jobs, and improve the lives of
individuals and families around our country. As the chairman of the
Senate's tax-writing committee, I am very excited for this opportunity,
and I am committed to doing all I can to make sure we succeed in this
endeavor and that we do it in a bipartisan way. We are working right
now, today, in a bipartisan way to try and resolve some of these
problems. I have been meeting with every member of our committee,
Democrats and Republicans, to see how we can work better together.
This discussion about comprehensive tax reform promises to be one of
the big-ticket items in the coming Congress, and I am excited to be a
part of it. In addition to tax reform, the Senate and Senate Finance
Committee
[[Page S6974]]
will have a number of other tasks to perform in the early days of the
115th Congress. For example, early on, I expect that we will finally be
able to repeal ObamaCare and begin a serious process of replacing it
with reforms that are more worthy of the American people. We also need
to take a serious look at our broken retirement programs like Medicare,
Medicaid, and Social Security. I am sure that simply because I am the
Republican who just happened to mention the name of those programs out
loud, I will be scorned and labeled a ``privatizer'' in certain policy
and advocacy corners after this speech. However, reductive labels
aside, no one seriously disputes the fact that these programs are in
fiscal trouble. We need to work toward finding solutions, and they need
to be bipartisan solutions.
I have put forward a number of potential solutions to help address
the coming entitlement crisis. I hope policymakers in Congress, the
incoming administration, and elsewhere will take a look at my ideas. I
think they will find they are ideas that will help this country out of
the problems and the mess it is in.
On top of tax and health care, we need to consider the future of U.S.
trade policy. While this was a matter of some fierce discussion during
the campaign, I remain committed to doing all I can to ensure that the
United States continues to lead the world in trade, including the
establishment of high-standard free-trade agreements.
All of these matters, and many others as well, fall within the
jurisdiction of the Senate Finance Committee. Fortunately, I am joined
on the committee with a host of capable U.S. Senators from both
parties. It is a great committee with great members, and I feel very
privileged to be able to lead that committee.
Over the past 2 years, we have demonstrated that by working together,
we can overcome some pretty long odds and accomplish a number of
difficult tasks. I hope that continues this next year. I am going to do
all I can to make sure it does.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mine Worker Health Care Benefits and Pensions
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I rise and stand here today fighting for
the working men and women each one of us--whether Democrat or
Republican, whether you belong to a 100-Member Senate or a 435-Member
House--use in our commercials. Every one of us goes out and basically
tries to attract working men and women to vote for us because we say:
We are coming here to fight for you. We are going to stand up for you.
No one is going to walk over you, push you aside, or forget about you.
Every one of us has done those ads.
Our 435 House Members had to go home yesterday because it was time
for Christmas. I remind all of my colleagues that we have basically
missed 100 working days this year. Do you think we have been
overworked? I don't think so, but I guess my House Members did because
they had to go home. They never even gave us the courtesy of giving us
a 3-day extension. We can work through these problems. We have said
that, but that is not even there. I guess they think they want to jam
us.
We are here fighting for the United Mine Workers pension, people who
have given this country everything they had. These are people who said:
I will go down there and get the energy you need to win the war and the
energy you need to build this country. I have the industrial might--the
middle class. We will build it. We are the middle class. That is who
they are. That is all they said. We made commitments to them.
For the first 50 years after they energized this country and won two
world wars, they got nothing. My grandfather was one of them. They got
nothing--no pension, no health care. They got nothing.
In 1946, they finally got something. We have been fighting ever since
then just to keep it, and now all of a sudden it is going to evaporate
and nobody will say a word because we have to go home for Christmas. We
have to go home for vacation.
Well, we have been working, fighting, and really clawing for this. We
have it. If it came to the floor, it would pass, and we know that, but
we have some friends on the other side--435 over there--who, for some
reason, didn't believe it was of urgency. They said, we are going to
give you a 4-month extension on the health care benefits that 16,000
miners lose December 31. We will give you 4 months, and I guess we are
supposed to be happy with that. Well, I am not. I am sorry, but I am
not.
We fought for the Miners Protection Act. We went through the regular
order and we got an 18-to-8 vote out of the Finance Committee at the
Senate, and we thought we would be right here having that vote and
showing the people we support them and that hopefully the House would
take it up, but that never happened.
Where we stand today, right now, is, we are asking what is our
pathway forward. Well, we have been working and talking, as you are
supposed to. We tried to basically negotiate, we tried to find
compromise, and we tried to find a pathway forward. It has been hard
for me to see a pathway forward right now.
I am going to have to oppose this CR and oppose, not only the cloture
but the passage of the CR for many reasons, and I will give you one
example that probably galls me more than anything else that we have
done here or over in the House. My Republican colleagues didn't even
know about it. It is not from this side. It came from that side, and
what they did was say, not only are we going to add insult to injury
and only give you 4 months, we will make you pay for it with your own
money. We will make you pay for it with money that has been set aside
through bankruptcy courts to give retirement to miners who worked for
companies that declared bankruptcy, went through the bankruptcy court,
had money set aside so they would at least have health care for a
while. The people we are talking about were supposed to have health
care until July. Guess what. Because of what we are doing, they lose 3
months. Now, grant you, we have people--16,000--who have health care
until December who get 4 months, if you consider that a victory, but
how about the couple thousand who were supposed to have it until July
are only going to have it now until April? What do you tell them? I am
sorry. We fought like the dickens for you, but you lost 3 months. Where
I come from that doesn't fly. I can't explain that. I really can't.
I am encouraged, to a certain extent. My friend the majority leader,
Mitch McConnell from Kentucky, said he was confident the retirees would
not lose benefits next year, including more than 3,000 in his home
State of Kentucky. I think it is highly unlikely we will take that
away, he said. It has been my intention that the miner benefits not
expire at the end of April next year. I believe him. And he pledged: I
am going to work with my colleagues to prevent that.
I am ready to go to work. I am not sure if my colleagues on the other
side--435 in the House--are as committed. I appreciate the majority
leader making this commitment. I do appreciate that very much.
Unfortunately, it is not enough because I don't have the commitment
from the other side, and I am going to fight for that. For that reason
and many more, I am going to be unable to vote for cloture, and I
encourage my colleagues not to vote for cloture on this CR.
With that, I yield the floor to my friend from Ohio, Senator Brown.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio is recognized.
Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I thank Senator Manchin, Senator Warner,
and Senator Casey, who all represent a lot of these mine workers. Some
of them are in the Gallery. We attended a rally with some of them the
other night. Some of them we see in Zanesville, Cambridge, Southwest
Pennsylvania, and Southwest Virginia.
I thank Senator McCaskill for her work on this.
Let's point out, again, to our colleagues what happened here. Early
this year, the Senate majority leader, the Republican leader from
Kentucky, said: Before we do this, you have to come up with a
bipartisan bill. We came up with a bipartisan bill. We did exactly what
he wanted. We had Senator Capito, Senator Portman, Senator Toomey, and
a lot of support on both sides, even people who didn't sponsor it. That
wasn't enough.
Then he moved the goalposts and said: You have to come up with the
bill
[[Page S6975]]
through regular order. We went through regular order in the Finance
Committee. Senator Warner, Senator Casey, and I in the Finance
Committee called Cecil Roberts, the head of the mine workers, people
like Norm Skinner from Ohio, Dave Urtest, Dave Dilly, and others came
and talked to us. We had testimony. It was brought to a vote and it
passed on a bipartisan vote, 18 to 8. Every Democrat voted for it and a
handful of Republicans voted for it. We did that, and then the
Republican leader moved the goalposts again and said: That is not good
enough. You have to do something more. You have to find a way to pay
for it. We found a way to pay for it with money out of the abandoned
mine fund to pay for this.
This legislation would have permanently taken care of much pensions
and health care. It would have meant that mine workers don't have to
take valuable time and spend money and come to Washington and lobbyists
to talk to us, educate us, and do what they do so well in telling their
stories. It would have solved that, but now week after week after week
has passed. Before the election, people were talking a good game, now
they are not talking such a good game, except for my colleagues with me
on the floor today fighting for them.
So what happens now? The majority leader in the Senate is pointing
fingers down this hall, blaming the Speaker of the House, and the
Speaker of the House back there is pointing fingers at the majority
leader saying: Well, I want to do a year. No, I want to do a year.
Well, the fact is, neither of them has offered anything. They could
bring this bill up to pass out of the Finance Committee. Senator
McConnell tonight could bring this to the Senate floor. We could pass
it. We would get how many votes: 75, 80 votes? We would get at least
70, probably 75 or 80. We would get every single Democrat, and we would
get probably close to half of the Republicans. They will not do that.
They are too busy pointing fingers back and forth.
So I am going to vote no on the continuing resolution because I just
don't think that this is the deal we should get. This 4-month deal
where the majority leader said he is helping the miners with a 4-month
deal--it means that the retired miners and the widows who got a notice
in late October, early November that their insurance would run out
December 31--if we do this 4-month deal, they are going to get another
notice in January or February saying it runs out again.
Particularly if you are sick, particularly if you have a sick
husband, can you imagine that you are going to get a notice every 3 or
4 months saying your insurance is going to run out? How do you deal
with that? How do you make doctor visits? How do you make appointments?
How do you do that? It is just cruel and unusual punishment.
Instead, the other night, we saw our colleagues coming to the floor,
offering resolutions. There was one honoring Pearl Harbor victims.
Senator Manchin and I were on the floor. We were objecting to all this.
Of course, I have been on the Veterans' Affairs Committee for a decade,
and so has Senator Manchin. Of course we are not objecting to honoring
Pearl Harbor victims any more than we are objecting to one of the other
resolutions that said we feel bad about the people who died in Oakland
in that fire; of course we do. But what we were doing and what we will
continue to do is fight for those mine workers, both the retirees and
the widows.
Next year that is what we are going to do. We will get a good vote
today in opposition to this because Democrats--people on this side--and
a handful of more courageous Republicans will vote no on the continuing
resolution. That should send a message to Senator McConnell on how
important it is that come January we vote, not on another 4-months and
another 4-months, not even voting for a year, but we vote for a
permanent fix on pensions and a permanent fix on health care that is
paid for out of the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund. That needs to be
what we do the first of the year.
This place is not going to operate very well if the leadership in
this body does not stand up and give us a vote on a bill that protects
mine worker retirees, that protects pensioners and health care, that
says that we are going to fix this permanently. They should not have to
come here month after month after month to lobby us.
This is something we should do. It has been an obligation since Harry
Truman. Senator McCaskill is always talking about Harry. Harry Truman
in the 1940s, seven decades ago, made this pledge, made this promise.
We all want to live up to the promise. Presidents of both parties,
Members of Congress in both parties were living up to that promise
decade after decade. Now they don't want to live up to it.
It is important that we enforce that come January. I am voting no. I
want to send that message. This is just too important to back down
from.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, at this time, to put things in
perspective, because a lot of people don't really know--people say: Why
do you even use coal anymore? Why do we even need coal? Let me explain
to the 300-plus million people living in America today that if you are
alive today, for most of your life, over 50 percent of your energy that
has been given to you has been delivered to you because of coal. So to
put it in perspective, what 12 hours of the day do you not want
electricity? What 12 hours of the day do you not want heat, air
conditioning--anything?
We need to bring attention to the people who have done the work. That
is all we have said. They are forgotten heroes. In West Virginia, we
feel like a Vietnam returning veteran. We have done everything our
country has asked of us, and now you will not even recognize us. You
don't even understand what we have done.
Well, that is what we are doing. That is what we are fighting for.
At this time I would like to recognize my good friend from
Pennsylvania, Senator Bob Casey, who comes from the tremendous State of
Pennsylvania, which has provided an awful lot of energy for many years.
Senator Casey.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.
Mr. CASEY. Mr. President, I want to thank my colleague from West
Virginia for his leadership on this issue, going back not just days and
weeks but months and even years. I think we should start with the word
``promise'' tonight. We have a matter that came before the Senate that
Senator Brown indicated was the subject of a bipartisan consensus that
went all the way through the Finance Committee, a vote of 18 to 8
earlier this year. The question before the Senate today and the
question before the Senate in 2017 will continue to be: Will the
Senate--and I would add will the House of Representatives--keep our
promise to these coal miners and their families? It is really not more
complicated than that. We have to ask ourselves whether we are going to
fulfill our promise.
Just to give you a sense of what this means to individuals, I have
three letters in my hand. We have all gotten hundreds of them, if not
more, maybe thousands at this point. But I have three letters from
three different counties from which I will read excerpts.
The first one is from Johnstown, Cambria County, with a great history
of coal mining but also a great history of a diverse economy. This
individual wrote--actually two; it is a husband and wife writing to
me--saying: ``We are in our late 70s and desperately need our pension
and hospitalization.''
Cambria County, PA, alone has 2,483 pensioners. Just that one county
has that many pensioners who happen to be families who had a loved one
working in the coal mines. This is one of those families who wrote to
me. If you look at the health care issue and you look at it county by
county, sometimes the numbers are lower, but it is in the hundreds and
hundreds in many counties.
The next letter is from an individual in Green County. She is writing
about her husband, and she says:
My husband was only retired about 1 year when he found he
had cancer. One of the reliefs that he had while battling
cancer was knowing he had his pension and good health
benefits. So it was one less worry.
Green County is a small county in Pennsylvania, in the deep southwest
corner, right on the corner next to West Virginia and Ohio. In Green
County, there are 1,436 pensioners and many depending upon the health
care promise that our government made.
The third and final letter is from Westmoreland County, from an
individual talking about his time in the coal mines. He said:
[[Page S6976]]
My 33 years in the mining industry are testimony to the
fact that I provided a needed service to my country and my
family.
Then, later in the letter, he goes on to say:
Now, thousands face an uncertain future. A promise was made
and a promise needs to be kept.
In Westmoreland County, PA, there are 1,067 pensioners. Across our
State, just on health care, almost 1,400 Pennsylvanians are affected by
health care. Some of them have cancer. Some of them have a family where
the husband is dead and the wife has cancer. Some face the kind of
health care circumstances that none of us can identify with because
everyone who works--every Member of the Senate and the House--we have
health care. We don't have to worry about next week or next month or
next year.
So the question becomes, as I said, whether we are going to keep our
promise to these coal miners. There is no excuse for putting in the
continuing resolution as pathetic a proposal as we got this year in
this continuing resolution, which basically says: You have health care
for just 4 months, and you are supposed to be satisfied with that. In
fact, I think there was one Member of the Senate who said, ``They
should be satisfied with that''.
They should not be satisfied; coal miners and their families, retired
coal miners, nor should anyone here be satisfied with that. Also at the
same time, the proposal--or I should say now the policy in the
continuing resolution--has no fix at all for pensions, so these
counties, just three counties, that have thousands and thousands of
pensioners who earned that pension, who gave up a lot to get that
pension, who gave up a lot to get those health benefits--there is no
fix in the CR, the continuing resolution, for the pension problem.
We are supposed to be satisfied, and they are supposed be satisfied,
I guess, according to the line of argument from some on the other
side--not all, but some who said they should be satisfied. Well, here
is a news bulletin. We are not satisfied. These miners and their
families are not satisfied. We are not going to stop fighting on this.
We feel so strongly about this issue that many of us, including me,
will vote no on cloture on the CR, will vote no on the CR itself
because we feel that strongly.
As the presiding officer knows, usually when a continuing resolution
comes before the Senate, it gets overwhelming support. This is how
outrageous this is for these families. So you are going to see a number
of people on the floor here do something they probably have never done
before. They are going to register a protest in a very direct and
formal way, to say no to the CR tonight.
I know some people will be offended by that. I understand why they
might be across the country. But we have to ask ourselves: If it is
going to take a no on this resolution to get people to focus on what
these miners were promised and what this government has not done to
meet that promise, then we are willing to go to that length and to that
extent to vote no tonight because we have to keep a focus on this.
We are not going away, so for anyone who thinks that tonight is the
end of a chapter, we are just getting warmed up. We are just getting
warmed up on this because this is a promise we must keep.
These miners and their families kept their promise. The miners kept
their promise to their family that they would work and work in the
depths and the darkness of the coal mines, put their lives at risk
every single day. That is the first promise they made--and that they
would bring a home a paycheck so their family could eat every night and
afford a mortgage. So they kept their promise to their family. Many of
them kept their promise to their country. They fought in World War II,
they fought in Korea, they fought in Vietnam and beyond, in every war
we have had in the modern era. So they kept their promise.
It is not too difficult for a Senator or for a House Member to keep
their promise. All they have got to do is put their hand up and say
aye. I agree with keeping the promise to these miners. It is about time
that our government, including everyone here, kept our promise to these
coal miners.
So we are doing something that many of us have never done. We are
going to vote no on a resolution tonight to make it very clear that we
don't agree with what is in this continuing resolution with regard to
these miners, No. 1, and the other massage we are sending is that we
are coming back. We are going to come back week after week, month after
month, if not longer, to make sure that they get their health care and
they get their pensions.
So, this kind of solidarity, at least on this side of this aisle,
will remain intact. It will remain fortified and strong going forward.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, as you can see, I am extremely proud. I
can't tell you how proud I am of my colleagues. This is why we are
here. We are standing for the people who work every day to provide a
better living for themselves and to provide a better country for all of
us to live in.
With that, I am happy to be here with my good friend, my colleague,
and my dear friend from Virginia, Senator Mark Warner.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Virginia.
Mr. WARNER. Mr. President, first of all, let me echo everything that
Senator Casey and Senator Brown have said. But the reason we are here,
beyond the justness of our cause, is the fact that the Senator from
West Virginia, Mr. Manchin, has been absolutely relentless. He has not
let this issue die. For 18 months, he has gone through every hoop that
has been put in front of him. It is getting through. The fact is,
Senator Manchin today reintroduced the Miners Protection Act. In 1
day--in 1 day--he picked up 49 cosponsors of this legislation.
We are going to have a vote later tonight. Let me be clear. I am
going to join in that protest. But as somebody who has one heck of a
lot of Federal employees, we are not going to shut down the government
on this issue. We should not even be thinking about choices where we
have to trade off Federal workers and miners. That is not what we are
sent here to do. But we are going to make sure that this fight does not
end tonight. The 49 who signed up today will be in the 50s and in the
60s when we come back.
Let me just close. I know we have other colleagues, and others have
commented. I went through these talking points at other times, but you
have to hear the voices of people who are being affected. I got a
letter recently from Sharon. Sharon is from a coal miner's family in
Dickenson County, not too far from West Virginia and Kentucky.
Sharon wrote:
My father is a retired coal miner. For many years he worked
at Clinchfield Coal Company's Moss #2 mine. He gave them his
time, sweat, hard work, and even his health. In return, he
expected nothing more than a paycheck and a little pension,
and health care when he retired. He was promised that. He
deserves that.
She went on to talk about the fact that her dad grew up in the
Depression:
He grew up in a time when you took care of your things--and
he believed that you paid for what you got. He's paid dearly
for his pension and his health care. Please don't let that
get taken from him.
He's also a man who takes care of his money.
She said he was always tight with his money:
He planned for years for his retirement. He saved and
budgeted so that he would have enough with his pension to be
able to support himself through the rest of his years and not
be a burden on anyone.
Sharon, her coal miner family, and countless thousands of other
Americans are waiting for us to honor our commitments. We are taking a
step forward tonight. But echoing what other Senators have said before,
this issue will not go away until these miners get their justice.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The leader, the Senator from New York.
Mr. SCHUMER. Senator McCaskill and my colleagues are waiting.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that immediately after Senator
McCaskill speaks, I be given 3 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. MANCHIN. We have Senator Coons, Senator McCaskill, Senator
Schumer, and I am going to say something, and we will be finished.
Mr. SCHUMER. Is that OK?
[[Page S6977]]
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that after McCaskill, Coons;
after Coons, Schumer; and then Manchin. It won't take more than 10 to
12 total minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. SCHUMER. I thank the indulgence of my colleagues.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Mrs. McCASKILL. Mr. President, let me make very clear that when we
get these benefits for these coal miners and their widows--when that
happens, not if but when--make sure no one misunderstands who is
responsible for it.
I want the coal miners in West Virginia to know one thing, there is
only one person who will be responsible for those coal miners getting
their benefits and their promises being kept, and that will be Senator
Joe Manchin. It won't be President Donald Trump. It won't be the
minority leader or the majority leader. It won't be any of us. There is
only one man who is responsible for these coal miners getting what they
are due, and that is Senator Joe Manchin, who has fought.
I am so sick of Joe Manchin talking to me about the coal miners. You
can't see him in the hall when he doesn't grab you about the coal
miners. He feels this in his heart. These are the people he grew up
with. These are the people he knows and loves, and he is the one who is
going to make this happen.
The other one I am fighting for tonight is a guy named Harry. Every
time I open my desk, I get goosebumps because I look in my desk, and I
see the name Harry Truman scrawled in my desk.
If you are a student of history and you know anything about Harry
Truman, you know that he was very plainspoken. He got himself in a lot
of trouble with his mouth, but, boy, did he believe in keeping his
word.
When he was President of the United States--Louie Roberts told me, a
man from Willard, MO, who has been in the mines and is a third-
generation coal miner and has been in the mines all of his life:
John L. Lewis and Harry Truman--President of the United
States of America signed an agreement guaranteeing lifetime
medical benefits to UMWA miners. So Mr. & Mrs. Senators &
Congressmen would you please keep your Promise.
Would you please keep your promise.
Continuing:
We only ask that the Promise be kept that was made in that
1948 agreement.
I am also fighting for the word of Harry Truman. This debate reminds
me of a fight we had in Congress a couple of years ago. Back then,
Congress had approved a $1 trillion spending package. Oh, man, the
elves get busy around Christmastime. Omnibus package is code for ``you
have no idea what is in it.''
We looked and poked around in it, and we found they were cutting the
pensions of thousands of Missourians who drove trucks for a living. We
are talking about the people who take a shower after work, not before
work. This place is really good at taking care of the people who take a
shower before work. We are really good at that.
When they repeal the ACA, they are going to give a big old tax cut to
the 1 percent again. We are going to do that. We are going to throw 22
million off of health care. But boy oh boy, we are going to take care
of the 1 percent, but we are not so good at taking care of the people
who take a shower after work.
That bill allowed those truckdrivers to have their pensions cut. I
was the only Member of the Missouri congressional delegation to vote
against it. By the way, in the same bill, we gave a car and driver to a
Member of Congress. Really? A car and a driver to a Member of Congress
and in the same bill we cut the Teamsters' pensions. Now I hear the
House Members had to go home.
I don't know how many people who shower after work get 3 weeks off
for Christmas, but I am pretty sure there are none. I am pretty sure
they are trying to figure out if they have to cover a shift on
Christmas. I am pretty sure they have to figure out how they can make
ends meet so they can buy Christmas presents. But we have to get out of
here so we can have 3 weeks off for Christmas--what nerve, doing that
to these coal miners and taking 3 weeks off for Christmas.
On the way out the door, they did another Christmas present. They
made sure that the Russian oligarchs get to sell us steel. They took
out the ``Buy American'' provision in the WRDA bill. I think the guy
who just won the Presidency said we are going to buy American. Then
what did the Republicans in the House do? They take out the ``Buy
American'' provision less than a week after he said it on his victory
tour in Cincinnati.
I just know this. I am proud to vote no on the CR. Frankly, I am
probably going to vote no on WRDA because of what they did with ``Buy
American.'' I am sick of the games being played. We are going to fight.
We are going to fight until we get this done. We may not win this fight
tonight, but I guarantee you we are going to win it. As Harry Truman
would say--and I am quoting; so I can't get in trouble: ``Come hell or
high water, we are going to get it done.''
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Grassley). The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I know there is not a lot of coal mining
in Delaware, but we sure do have a lot of friends in Delaware.
I yield to my dear friend, Senator Chris Coons.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I rise in support and recognition of the
tireless efforts of my friend and colleague from West Virginia. We were
sworn in the same day, moments apart, and we were sworn in by a man who
held this seat and this desk for 36 years. Born in Scranton, PA, Joe
Biden, our Vice President, served Delaware for 36 years. I know Joe and
I know one of the things he tirelessly fought for, and that was the
working men and women of this country--just like my colleague from
Missouri, who speaks from the desk long held by Harry Truman and in
whose honor she spoke about our keeping our promises that date back to
a law passed by this Congress and signed into law by Harry Truman that
promised pensions and health care to 100,000 coal miners.
I too have to keep faith with my predecessor in this seat, Joe Biden,
and our neighboring State to the north, Pennsylvania; my great and good
friend, Joe Manchin from West Virginia; Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota;
and many others who have spoken before me and simply say: I understand
that large, complicated appropriations bills never include every item
that every Member wants. I wanted a provision that would help a
manufacturing company in my State, the 48 ITC provision. The investment
tax credit would help keep a company that manufactures fuel cells in my
State alive and running. I heard an awful lot of talk in this campaign
about saving American manufacturing, about doing the things we need to
do to help working people and to help manufacturing. I am as upset as
my colleagues about the ``Buy American'' provision being taken out of
WRDA and our not keeping our word to buy American steel.
But what all of us are here to stand for in common today is to keep
our promises to the coal miners and their widows, for whom the Senator
from West Virginia has fought so tirelessly.
When told that is a provision that can't be taken care of, that can't
be done, when they were sent back 30 yards, they dropped back and said:
Fine, we will work on the Miners Protection Act. They held hearings.
They held a markup. They found an offset. They moved through regular
order, and they found bipartisan support. It got out of the Finance
Committee by 18 to 8.
Yet here we stand, likely on the very last night of this Congress,
with a promised path being blocked and a 4-month extension, rather than
a permanent solution--seemingly, the only option before us--and 16,000
miners and their families would lose health care this December 31
without a longer extension. Four months--that is all we can do--4
months, when these good Senators worked so hard and so tirelessly to
find a bipartisan solution that doesn't take money out of the Federal
checkbook, that has a proper path? This is a sad day when we can't keep
our promises to the widows of coal miners, to folks who did dirty,
dangerous, and difficult work for decades,
[[Page S6978]]
to the people who built this country. I think in some ways this is just
a symbol of so many other ways we have failed to keep faith with those
who have worked in this Nation for us.
I have not ever voted against a CR. I have always taken, I believe,
the responsible path of making sure that we are able to craft a
responsible compromise and get it done.
But as an appropriator in this year and in this instance, it was
upsetting to me that we were kept completely out of the process of
crafting and finalizing this appropriations bill.
So without hesitation, I will vote against it tonight because it is
important we send a signal that we and many other Senators are
determined to fix this problem. As the Senator from West Virginia said,
there are no coal mines in my State, but there are many retired coal
miners and their widows.
I have joined as a cosponsor of the Miners Protection Act, and I am
determined to support the great and good work of my friend, the Senator
from West Virginia, my friend the Senator from North Dakota, and so
many others--from my neighboring State of Pennsylvania, Senator Casey,
and from States across the country and regions that are determined to
do right by the people who built this Nation for us.
Thank you, Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, as you can see, there is a lot of passion
here and a lot of passion for people who have hard-working men and
women in their State also. I am so proud to have the incoming leader of
our caucus, Senator Schumer from New York, who has been a stalwart on
this. He has fought. He has stayed with us every step of the way, and
he will continue to lead this fight until we are successful. At this
time, I wish to make sure Senator Schumer gets recognized.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New York.
Mr. SCHUMER. Thank you, Mr. President.
First, let me pay tribute to the steadfastness, the strength, and the
courage of my friend from West Virginia. As Senator McCaskill said, not
a day goes by where he doesn't remind us of the coal miners and their
plight.
Last night, through his good offices, I met with some of these
miners. They are not from my State either.
I looked into their eyes--hard-working people, many of them tired,
not from the day, not from lobbying here--that is easy work for them--
but from working in those mines for so many years. They are America.
They are the people we owe so much to.
Having met them, seen them, and looked into their eyes, I understood
why my dear friend from West Virginia and my friends from Virginia,
Missouri, Pennsylvania, and North Dakota have such passion for these
people. It is real.
I hope some of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle in the
next month will be visited by these very miners. Look them in the eye,
and tell them you can't help them? I bet you can't. I bet you can't.
We are here to live up to a promise made by Harry Truman, backed up
by legislation in this body over and over. I don't care what your
ideology is. I don't care if you are a big government cutter. This is
not the place to cut. This is the place to recognize hard work, a
promise, and America, because we say to people: If you work hard, we
are going to be there for you. But tonight, we are barely there for
you. We are not cutting it off, but we are not doing right by the
people I met last night through the auspices of the Senator from West
Virginia, fine people who got to my heart.
So we believe deeply in preserving these benefits, and we also
believe in not hurting other people to preserve these benefits. So we
are not going to shut down the government; we are going to keep it
open. That would hurt millions of Americans as well and take millions
out of the economy. So we are going to provide the votes to make sure
we don't shut down, although there are so many people who want to stand
with the miners. We never intended to shut down the government, but our
intention is very real--first, to highlight the seriousness of this
issue, not to let people think this is going to go away because they
didn't live up to their promise. And I think we have made our point. I
don't care if people don't like being here on a Friday night. I know
people have other obligations, but those obligations are nothing
compared to our obligation to these miners.
Leader McConnell spoke to Senator Manchin a few hours ago and said
that he would work hard to make the health benefits for miners not
lapse in April. That is good, but it is not close to enough. It is a
step forward, but we will go further, hopefully with the majority
leader but even without.
We need the finance bill, the Miners Protection Act, a bill that
would move money from the Abandoned Mine Lands Reclamation Fund into a
fund to pay for the pension and health care benefits of tens of
thousands of coal miners and retirees, not for 3 months, not for 1
year, but permanently. To show how serious we are, every single
Democrat within just a few hours cosponsored the miners amendment to
the CR, and we did get two Republicans to join us. Welcome. We need
more of you. Stand up for the miners.
The fact that we have gotten so many people on this legislation bodes
well for our chances of getting something significant done in the new
year. So when we return in January, we are going to be looking at every
way we can to make sure the miners receive full funding. The sooner the
better, the stronger the proposal the better, and we will do it.
Finally, I want to call on President-elect Trump to support our
proposal. The President-elect ran on a campaign with explicit, direct
promises to coal country, and he won coal country big; that is for
sure. He held big rallies with coal workers. He said he would protect
them. He talked to the miners and got to know them. So we are simply
asking our President-elect to communicate to the people in his party to
get on board and live up to the promise we made to miners many years--
decades--ago.
Tonight, we are putting our Republican colleagues on notice. We will
not rest until we do right by our miners.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.
Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I thank my colleagues so much. I am so
sorry. The patience you have had is appreciated very much. It is an
issue, as my colleagues can tell, we are very committed to and very
passionate about. So thank you. We are just wrapping up.
I just want to say one thing to put it in perspective. I get to go
around to schools in my State and really around the country talking to
schoolkids, and I try to give a little history lesson. I always tell
them: If you see a person in uniform, if your parent or your
grandparent or your aunt or uncle, someone served in the military, I
want you to say thank you because I want you to realize they were
willing to take a bullet for you. They were willing to sacrifice their
life for the freedom they are providing for you. Don't ever take it for
granted.
What we failed to teach in that history lesson is to say thank you to
a coal miner who has provided the energy to allow us to be the
superpower, the greatest country on Earth. Say thank you.
Thank you to every one of my coal miners for what you do and what you
have done for me in my little town of fewer than 500 people. I can't
tell you how much I appreciate the life I have had because of the
sacrifices and hard work you have given for me.
With that, I want to say to all of my colleagues, God bless each and
every one of you. Thank you for the fight. This is the right fight for
the right reason for the right people.
We will finish very quickly now with Senator Jeff Merkley.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, we heard a tremendous amount over the
course of the past year about fighting for workers and working
families. What does it take for a working family to thrive? It takes a
good living-wage job, access to public education for children, and for
those children to be able to pursue their dreams with affordable
opportunities and education. It also takes health care.
Take a profession like coal mining--far more dangerous than virtually
any profession Members of the Senate have
[[Page S6979]]
had in the course of their lives. Health care is an essential element
both for the miner and for their families. So how is it that we are at
this point right now in which many miners don't know if they are going
to have health care beyond April of next year? They don't know whether
this body is going to stand with them. They are in limbo. They are in a
state of anxiety, and it is absolutely unfair.
So we know, as tonight progresses, we are in a situation where we
have an extension through April, but, as Joe Manchin has said in his
fight leading this effort to necessarily secure health care for coal
miners and as our incoming Democratic leader has said, this is going to
be something that we are going to stand together for in this coming
year. We are going to make sure their health care does not expire in
April. This benefit has been earned through hard labor, over difficult
years, in ways few of us can imagine, and we are going to stand with
the coal miners in getting that benefit.
I am proud to sponsor this bill and stand with Joe Manchin and Chuck
Schumer tonight.
Mr. KAINE. Mr. President, I wanted to indicate how disappointed I am
in the provisions affecting miners that have been included in the
continuing resolution. While I will vote for final passage of the CR
because we must not shut government down, the provisions contained are
really an outrage.
Sixteen thousand three hundred retirees have received a notice that
their health benefits will expire at the end of this year. What the
majority has included in the CR is to extend those benefits through
April. But what was left unsaid is that now, 22,500 retirees will lose
health coverage at the end of April 2017, and 4,000 will lose them 3
months earlier than they otherwise would have. This plan also calls for
taking money from a fund created to provide health coverage for retired
miners whose employers went bankrupt. It ends the responsibility of the
coal companies to contribute to this fund. This is a terrible giveaway
cloaked in the provisions providing short-term health care for miners
and their widows.
The promise that we will deal with those consequences later rings
hollow when we have a permanent bipartisan solution before us, the
Miners Protection Act. I have supported this and previous versions of
this fix since I began my service in the Senate 3 years ago. The
majority leader wanted the bill to go through regular order before any
floor consideration. Well, this legislation passed the Senate Finance
Committee 18-8 and is paid for.
I don't understand why we didn't take a floor vote on this bill
months ago. It would receive strong bipartisan backing if it could get
a floor vote.
Many of us talk about helping the working men and women of our
country, protecting seniors and respecting the dignity of a lifetime of
work. Well, many of our constituents have been hard hit by the downturn
in the coal industry. We cannot downplay what coal miners have
sacrificed to fuel this Nation for over a hundred years--black Lung
disease, physically disabling accidents, whole communities built around
coal mining have vanished or are suffering.
We say we want to support working families and protect seniors. We
say we want to help Appalachia. I don't know what we are waiting for.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, a number of us have been waiting for
several hours to speak. We understand the concerns of our colleagues
across the aisle. We have been patiently waiting. I believe they have
finished their remarks.
I would say that there were a lot of remarks directed across the
aisle. There are several of us over here who are in support and voted
for the issue of the day here. If only our Republican friends could
join us, they said, we wouldn't be in this situation.
Several of us have supported this. Given the circumstances here at
the end of the year with making sure we keep funding for government
functions and not have it shut down, the agreement that has now been
reached is a reasonable agreement that obviously will be taken up again
in the next Congress. I won't be here. I supported it this year. I know
a number of my colleagues have supported it. Many of us are from coal
country and understand the concerns. But the larger issue for us is not
to go into another shutdown.
I have served in the Senate for many years, and there has been
nothing more disruptive that produces more uncertainty among businesses
and individuals and employees throughout this country than the Congress
not doing its job and providing funding for them and shutting down the
government.
Having said that, I ask unanimous consent that following what we have
just heard, Senator Gardner have the opportunity to speak, I think for
a relatively limited time, that I follow him, and I believe Senator
Sullivan also wishes to come to the floor and speak.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, there has
been a list that has been worked out for both sides. Many of us have
been waiting many hours to deliver our speeches, and I believe what the
Senator is proposing modifies that considerably.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I have
been on the floor here waiting for 2\1/2\ hours to deliver my speech on
WRDA, and I don't think my colleagues across the aisle have been here
for that amount of time. Maybe we should stick to the list that has
been worked out on both sides.
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, if I could respond to my colleague, many of
us have been on the list also, and we also have been waiting hours and
hours and hours--patiently waiting. Again, working down through the
list was not followed by the opposition.
I am simply saying that what was asked just a few moments ago was not
objected to. When Members on the other side of the aisle had their
opportunity to speak, we were patiently waiting. They have left the
floor. There is no one on their side who has not spoken.
I don't see what the problem is. The Senator from Oregon wants to
file a list, but no one on the list on the other side is here. We are
going to speak for a limited amount of time, and we have been waiting 3
hours to do so. So I am hoping my colleague would allow us to do that.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, reserving the right to object, I believe
my colleague makes a persuasive argument. Many did come to the floor to
share in that important dialogue regarding extending health care for
our miners, and given that, I take the Senator's point, and I look
forward to speaking later.
Mr. COATS. I thank my colleague.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Colorado.
Mr. GARDNER. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Oregon for his
accommodation in allowing us to speak, and I thank the Senator from
Indiana, whom we will miss in the next Congress. The Senator from
Indiana has been a great example for those of us who are new to the
Senate in terms of his representation and statesmanship, and I hope and
wish the Senator from Indiana nothing but the best for his future.
Tribute to Alan Lee Foutz
Mr. GARDNER. Mr. President, I rise to honor the retirement and life
and work of my dear friend Alan Lee Foutz.
Alan has been a part of my congressional staff for 6 years,
representing the eastern planes of Colorado, first in Sterling and now
in my hometown of Yuma, CO. His devotion to Coloradans is nothing short
of inspiring, and his accomplishments in the field of agriculture and
food production are a true testament to his agricultural acumen. But
beyond that, it is his passion for serving others, his ability to find
the positive in any situation, and his genuine demeanor that make me
grateful and honored to call Alan a true friend.
Born on December 29, 1946, and raised in Akron, CO, Alan developed a
penchant for agriculture. He was raised on his family farm, where they
grew wheat and hay and raised turkeys, hogs, and a dairy herd.
In 1968, Alan graduated from my alma mater, Colorado State
University, and earned a master's degree in agronomy in 1970. Alan went
on to earn his Ph.D. in agronomy and plant genetics on several
innovative projects, such
[[Page S6980]]
as mapping out the barley genome. He then pursued and followed his
passion to California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo,
where he accepted a job as an associate professor of crops. From there,
he was able to impart his passion and expertise to his students,
thereby cultivating the next generation of food producers for our
Nation.
Without a doubt, it was Alan's enduring spirit and overall amiability
that made him the perfect fit to inspire young minds, but it was his
love of Colorado that drew him back to his home State and his roots.
After 9 years in California, Alan returned home and put his academic
credentials to the test by partnering with his dad, Lyle, to operate a
10,000-acre family farm. But even that wasn't enough to satisfy Alan's
insatiable appetite to advance Colorado agriculture. He became heavily
involved in the Colorado Farm Bureau and in the year 2000 was elected
president of both the Colorado Farm Bureau and the Colorado Farm Bureau
Mutual Insurance Company. From there, his commitment to uphold and
ensure Colorado's traditional farming and ranching values was
fortified, guaranteeing a lasting impact on the agriculture community.
But Alan's service was not confined to the borders of Colorado, nor
to the shorelines of America. He dutifully served on the American Farm
Bureau Federation Board for 6 years and made multiple trips overseas to
help further U.S. agricultural markets and exports to other nations.
Indeed, with this impressive record, it is easy to see how lucky I was
to have such an accomplished staffer join my team.
Over the years, while he was employed in my office, Alan demonstrated
his tireless work ethic and commitment to Colorado agriculture. He
played an influential role in ensuring that farmers and ranchers in the
Republican River Basin who chose to conserve their land were being
properly compensated by the USDA. Likewise, throughout the 2014 farm
bill negotiations, Alan used his lifelong knowledge of agriculture
policy to ensure that agriculture stakeholders across the State were
being properly represented. And through the casework he does in my
office, he has touched so many lives--likely more than he realizes. He
has helped families navigate the adoption process to take home a child
without a home. He has assisted countless veterans with getting the
benefit they deserve and so much more. These are not just cases to
Alan; these acts change people's lives, and he does them with humility
and because he has a heart that is geared toward the service of others.
Nonetheless, after all of his successes, after all of his degrees,
and after all of his accomplishments in and out of my congressional
office, it is Alan's devotion and absolute love for his family and his
church that is most inspiring.
He married his wife Val in 1966 and raised two children, Paula and
Greg. When Al is not working on behalf of Colorado, he and Val enjoy
spending time spoiling their grandchildren.
According to Alan, the driving force that propels his ambition and
unequivocal success in life is his family. That is the true mark of an
honorable man.
He wakes up every Sunday morning and drives almost 2 hours to serve
as the only pastor at Kimball Presbyterian Church in Kimball, NE--
basically 100 miles one way from his hometown--a small church that
relies on his commitment to their community each and every week, a trip
he makes for funerals, for weddings, for home visitations, but Alan
doesn't just keep his commitment to his faith within walls of his
church, he brings it with him everywhere he goes--whether it is by
lending an ear to a young staffer in need of advice or making hospital
visits to those in need. Alan is a man that exemplifies true virtue and
a devotion to service.
Few people can honestly say they have made a long-lasting and
meaningful impact on society. Alan is one of those.
Thank you for your passionate zeal, Alan, you bring to our team day
in and day out. Thank you for your dedication to Colorado's farmers and
ranchers, and thank you for providing me an opportunity to learn from
you and to help move our great State forward.
God bless the Foutz family. I hope your good will, passion, and
enduring spirit will continue to flourish.
Honoring Colorado State Patrol Trooper Cody Donahue
Mr. President, I rise to honor the legacy of Colorado State Patrol
Trooper Cody Donahue.
On November 25, 2016, Cody pulled his vehicle over to the side of I-
25 in Colorado to investigate and assist with a car accident. Cody was
struck by an oncoming vehicle and tragically killed. Cody gave his life
while nobly performing his duties as a Colorado State Patrol Trooper,
and he--like all who walk the thin blue line--dedicated his life to
protecting and serving his community.
Cody was an 11-year veteran of the Colorado State Patrol, a loving
husband, devoted father, and a wonderful son and brother. He grew up in
Grand Forks, ND, and attended the University of North Dakota, during
which time he married the love of his life, Velma, and eventually moved
to Denver, where they gave birth to two beautiful girls, Maya and
Leila.
Since his passing, it is evident, through the numerous stories shared
by families and friends, that Cody was always quick to put others
before himself. So it comes as no surprise that Cody joined the State
Patrol. His courage, reliability, and selflessness made him a perfect
fit for a unit dedicated to the safety of Coloradans.
It is well known within the Colorado State Troopers' family that the
badge represents distinct values that each trooper must possess:
character, integrity, and honor are to name a few. Cody was, true to
form, an embodiment of each one of these values.
Character. Cody was a hard-working and equitable man. His fellow
troopers were quick to point out that Cody would always treat each
person he met fairly and with great respect and dignity. A true
testament to his genuine character.
Integrity. Those closest to Cody knew him as a man of profound
honesty who possessed a natural aspiration to lead and serve others.
According to a tribute, Cody ``was so honest that he once ticketed his
wife!''
Honor. Cody was a genuine teamplayer, and would show up to work every
day ready to serve, ensuring that his team was never a man down.
Indeed, Cody's core values as a State Trooper extended beyond the
department. He was known as a loving husband and caring father whose
adoration for his family knew no bounds. He placed his family on a
pedestal and strived to be the best father and husband that he could
be.
As we celebrate the holiday spirit with family and friends, we must
never forget the tireless efforts undertaken by Cody and all the
courageous men and women in blue to uphold the law. Many of these brave
officers do not have the luxury to spend holidays with family and
friends. Instead, they answer the call to duty. They ensure the safety
of those we love most. They are the force that watches over us. So,
from the bottom of my heart, thank you.
A hero is defined as someone who is ``admired for his or her courage,
outstanding achievements, and noble qualities.'' Through his work and
time spent with family and friends, Cody embodied each and every one of
these characteristics. So although Cody is gone, his memory will live
on. Character, integrity, and honor, these were Cody's core values--
values we must strive to emulate, values that will make Colorado and
this world a better place.
Honoring Deputy Derek Geer
Mr. President, when I was preparing this speech, I noticed there was
a Christmas card on my desk today. I have it right here with me. It
says, ``Merry Christmas.'' Inside it says: ``Wishing you all the beauty
and joy of this peaceful Christmas season,'' and there was a note in it
from David and Sandra Geer. Earlier this year, Derek Geer, their son--a
law enforcement official--was also killed.
So while we pay tribute to Cody today, we pay tribute to Derek and so
many others who feel like they have been targeted, feel alone, who must
know we care for them, must know we love them, and must know we keep
them in our prayers, day in and day out. May it not just be this
holiday season but every day that they stand on that thin blue line.
[[Page S6981]]
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
Wasteful Spending
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, as my time in the Senate winds down, I find
myself reflecting on many of the reasons I decided to return to the
U.S. Senate.
Without a doubt, one of the main factors for my return was the
skyrocketing Federal debt and the harm Washington's excessive spending
will have on future generations, including my children and 10
grandchildren.
The day President Obama took office, the national debt was $10.6
trillion. We are now closing in on $20 trillion. Clearly, this cannot
be sustainable without extraordinarily negative consequences for the
future. That debt clock continues to tick along, and we continue to
roll into more and more debt as we spend more and more on government
programs than the revenue coming in to pay for them.
So when I returned to the Senate in 2011, I sought out opportunities
to address this ticking timebomb. I worked with my colleagues, both
Republicans and across the aisle with Democrats, on efforts to restrain
Federal spending and stabilize our Nation's finances.
There were a number of efforts made. We are all familiar with
Simpson-Bowles, a bipartisan effort that tragically did not succeed and
was not accepted by the President. The Committee of 6--the Gang of 6,
the so-called Gang of 6, three Democrats, three Republicans, seriously,
fastidiously worked to try to put together a formula to put us on a
path to fiscal responsibility. Then there was the supercommittee, and
there were outside groups led by both Republicans and Democrats.
Ultimately, we hoped we were finalizing the efforts when the
President, through his own initiative across the aisle, brought several
of us into his venue and talked about how we could work together. I was
part of that effort. Ultimately, eight of us, spending a considerable
amount of time with the President's top people and the President
himself, tried to find a solution or at least a step forward in the
right direction. I am sorry to say that also did not succeed in the
end, when even some of the President's own budget initiatives he had
proposed were rejected by him later as part of a package.
When it became clear to me that major reform efforts could not be
enacted while the administration occupied the White House, I launched a
new initiative which I called the ``Waste of the Week.'' I decided that
each week when the Senate was in session, I would speak about
documented and certified examples by nonpartisan agencies--those we
turn to, to give us the numbers, those inspectors general who have
investigated the situation and made recommendations, the Government
Accountability Office--and all the material that is provided to us, not
on a partisan basis but simply the numbers, just the facts in terms of
how taxpayers' money is being spent.
Today marks the 55th and final ``Waste of the Week'' speech. It may
be fittingly so on what looks to be the last day of this session and my
last day serving in the United States Senate.
It is a little bit of walking down memory lane in terms of talking
about the ``Waste of the Week'' and the various items we have proposed.
It has been everything from the serious to the ridiculous, which grabs
people's attention: Look, I can understand maybe this particular
situation where we overspent, but, come on, clearly, surely, we weren't
using taxpayer dollars for something as ridiculous or embarrassing as
that. I will mention a few of my favorite examples here that we have
talked about.
Fraudulent double-dipping in Social Security disability insurance and
unemployment insurance benefits to the tune of $5.7 billion that was
spent through basic fraud by those who were submitting applications for
and receiving payments for both. Look, if you can work but are thrown
out of work, unemployment insurance is available to you. If you are
disabled and can't work, Social Security Disability payments are made
to you, but you can't collect both, and people were collecting both, to
the tune of $5.7 billion.
Fraud in the Food Stamp Program. People were fraudulently receiving
up to a total of 3 billion documented dollars in that program.
Department of Agriculture payments to dead people resulted in over
$27 million of payments.
These are the things that were presented. We were talking about
several hundreds of millions of dollars and even billions of dollars.
Something that grabbed the most attention was a study by a National
Institutes of Health which was issued in which 18 New Zealand white
rabbits received four 30-minute massages a day. The study was conducted
at Ohio State University and designed to figure out whether massages
can help recovery times after strenuous exercise.
I raised the question: Did we need to bring over 18 white New Zealand
rabbits? I don't know what the cost was, but I think we probably could
have found some rabbits in the United States at much less cost.
Nevertheless, the study went forward, and, guess what. The results were
that after four massages a day after strenuous exercise, they felt
better than if they didn't get the massages. I wanted to apply for that
process there, but I learned they euthanized the rabbits after the
study was done. So I thought, well, it is a good thing I didn't join
that effort.
Nevertheless, I was thinking, couldn't they just ask the Ohio State
football team after a practice: Hey, guys, we are going to divide you
in two categories. This category over here is not going to get massages
after our strenuous practice sessions and this half is going to get the
massages and we will see if the guys who get the massages feel better
than the guys who didn't. I think they would have saved the taxpayers a
considerable amount of money. I don't see why the National Institutes
of Health can come to the conclusion that a grant request for massaging
rabbits is a good use of taxpayer money.
That is just 4 out of the 54 I have talked about. That is my walk
down memory lane, but the total amount of the waste identified through
these 54 examples adds up to more than $350 billion.
We are down here arguing now about payments on a program, and we are
talking about--well, we can't fund this, we can't fund that, that is an
essential program, the Defense Department needs more money, the
National Institutes of Health needs more money for cancer research, but
we don't have any more money to give them.
Why not take actions to stop this waste, fraud, and abuse or, better
yet, why not, not ask the taxpayer for this money in the first place?
Why should the taxpayer be sending money to Washington to see that the
accomplishment is waste, fraud, or abuse?
I am pleased to note we have actually had some success in addressing
some of this wasteful spending highlighted in these speeches. Last
year, the Congress approved legislation that will finally--finally--
phase out the so-called temporary tax credit for wind energy--a credit
that was supposed to expire over 20 years ago. We were promised that
this is a study to get it started and see if it works to get enough
wind energy at a cost that the public could afford and see this as a
way of providing alternative energy, but, boy, once something is on the
books, it gets reauthorized and reauthorized over and over. And for 20
years it is: Oh, we just need it 1 more year. We just need it one more
time. On and on it goes.
Finally--finally--we have seen action taken by the Congress to
complete this phaseout program, which will essentially save taxpayers
billions of dollars and reduce the government's involvement in picking
winners and losers through tax policy.
Congress also approved a measure I introduced to improve compliance
in higher education tax benefits. By simply adding language to require
proof of eligibility for certain tuition tax credits, we saved
taxpayers over half a billion dollars in improper payments.
Recent Defense authorization bills have included provisions to reform
the defense contracting process, which will help cut down on billions
of waste. Of course, more work is still needed in this area, as a
recent report identified as much as $125 billion in wasteful spending
at the Department of Defense. I am a strong proponent of a strong
national defense, but when we find that well over $100 billion has been
misspent, we are compromising our national security, and we are not
giving
[[Page S6982]]
our soldiers, sailors, marines, Coast Guard, and others all the
resources they need to provide for our national security the way it
needs to be provided for.
Today I am here for my 55th and final ``Waste of the Week.'' I want
to talk about relatively modest--it is amazing you can say this. Only
here in this Chamber, only in Washington is $48 million called
``modest'' because we talk in billions and trillions. Anyway, $48
million in Medicaid funding for drugs to treat hair loss--not hair loss
for therapeutic reasons, not hair loss as a result of cancer
treatments, but for cosmetic purposes. Medicaid is paying out $48
million to provide for measures that will help reduce hair loss.
I want to stress that Medicaid is part of our Nation's safety net, to
help those in need. That is all the more reason we have to ensure that
Medicaid is run effectively and efficiently to have the financial
resources to help low-income families gain access to medical care. This
also means we have to protect Medicaid by ensuring that its finances
are not used for medically unnecessary services.
There are certain medical services that all State Medicaid plans are
mandated to provide, and then there are a number of additional services
that are optional for States to cover. One of these services includes
drugs to treat cosmetic hair loss. This is not hair loss due to an
underlying medical issue, as I mentioned; this is hair loss that just
happens, often as we age. The treatments paid by Medicaid are for
cosmetic purposes only.
I think all of us would love to have a full head of hair, and I speak
as one who falls in that category. As I look around the Senate Chamber,
I see others who have joined me in watching the hair fall off their
head and looking in the mirror and saying: How many hairs did I lose
last night, and when is this going to end?
Losing your hair is not always fun, but I promise you, as someone who
has been through all of this--and you are not alone--soon enough you
will simply accept the fact that while you won't make the finals in the
50 Most Beautiful People in America, life will go on.
According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the Federal
Government could save $48 million over 10 years by not paying for this
cosmetic hair loss treatment. While this may seem like a small amount
of money compared to our nearly $20 trillion national debt, it is yet
another example of unnecessary use of hard-earned taxpayer dollars.
Fortunately, the Senate recently passed legislation that included a
provision to end the Federal reimbursement for cosmetic hair loss, and
that bill, fortunately, is on the way to the President for signature
into law. By bringing attention to some of these issues, we have been
able to take legislative action to try to address and keep unnecessary
spending off the charts.
To conclude, while today marks the end of the ``Waste of the Week,''
I want to implore my colleagues in the House and Senate to keep going,
to keep fighting to stop wasteful spending.
I also want to acknowledge that my staff over the period of time, at
different times, as they were working on this project, provided to me
the examples, and they dug in and did their research so that I could
come to the floor to make these points and hopefully, hopefully save
the taxpayer hard-earned dollars that shouldn't have been sent to
Washington in the first place but were not used wisely and efficiently
when they came here. I particularly want to thank the following members
of my staff: Paige Hanson, Ansley Rhyne, Aaron Smith, Amy Timmerman,
Kristine Michalson, Matt Lahr, and Viraj Mirani.
Our former Governor, my friend Mitch Daniels--former Governor of
Indiana and the current president of Purdue University--famously said:
``You'd be amazed at how much government you'll never miss.'' Indiana
has set the example with significant cuts and reforms in spending to
take our State from a deficit to a $2.4 billion surplus. There were
significant cuts in many agencies through the growing of bureaucracy
that took place, and we have yet to find what parts of government we
miss.
There are so many programs and so many ridiculous things that the
government funds--like rabbit massages and cosmetic hair loss
treatment--that most Americans don't even know about and have never
heard of, and while I no longer will be here, I am hopeful that the
next President and the next Congress will work in tandem to achieve
these goals. They could use my 55 ``Waste of the Week'' examples as a
starting point, and they can continue because we have just scratched
the surface.
Today, I would like to add $48 million to our total. And just in this
cycle of the Senate alone, we have come up with a grand total of
$351,635,239,536--money that can be used for a better purpose.
With that, my final words addressed to my colleagues in this
extraordinary experience I have been privileged to enjoy, I, for the
last time, yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who seeks recognition?
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, under the unanimous consent, Senator
Sullivan was up. I notice the leader is on the floor, and I am sure he
would yield to the leader for his leadership purposes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, let me give everyone the state of play.
First, I will be offering a consent request to set the continuing
resolution votes at 10 o'clock.
Having said that, I ask unanimous consent that not withstanding the
provisions of rule XXII, at 10 p.m., the Senate vote on the cloture
motion with respect to the House message to accompany H.R. 2028. I
further ask that if cloture is invoked, all time postcloture be
considered expired and Senator McCain or his designee be recognized to
offer a budget point of order, and that if the point of order is
raised, the motion to waive be considered made and the Senate vote on
the motion to waive without any intervening action or debate. I further
ask that if the motion to waive is agreed to, the motion to concur with
further amendment then be withdrawn and the Senate vote on the motion
to concur in the House amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, let me explain before my colleague, the
Democratic leader, addresses the matter. What this does is set up votes
in connection with the CR at 10 p.m., but then I want everybody to
understand that if we can't get an agreement to move the WRDA votes up
to that series of votes, they will occur 3 hours later, at 1 a.m.
Failure to consent to including WRDA will only delay the Senate until 1
a.m. in the morning.
Let me go over that again. At the moment, I understand there is an
objection to adding the WRDA votes to the stack that we just agreed to.
So without consent, we will be here another 3 hours or so, voting at 1
a.m. Everybody should understand we are going to finish all of these
votes tonight, and that is the schedule for the rest of the evening.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, we have now three hours until 10 o'clock. I
hope that during that period of time, people will do whatever they need
to do to make sure they get anything they want in, whatever they are
trying to get.
The reason I say that is that we are going to continue, as the leader
has indicated, working on a way to get out of here tonight. If not, we
will get out of here tomorrow. I hope that--if someone has something
they want to talk to me about, I will be happy to carry that message to
anyone, including the Republican leader, but I think right now we have
3 hours to sit around, stand around, and talk about this and find out
if there is anything more that can be done.
I hope that at 10 o'clock, we will be in a position to let everybody
know if we are going to have a vote before 1 o'clock in the morning
because these votes will take at least an hour, the three votes that
are scheduled, so that means 11 o'clock. By waiting around, you are
delaying things by a couple of hours at a fairly late time at night. I
think by now everyone has a pretty good idea of how they are going to
vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, my colleagues have been very gracious and
[[Page S6983]]
have gotten a little bit out of the queue, so I ask unanimous consent
that I be allowed to address the body for 5 minutes; following me,
Senator Sullivan will address the Senate for 10 minutes; and following
him, Senator Coons will address the Senate for 5 minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
WRDA
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I rise to voice my opposition to the Water
Infrastructure Improvement for the Nation Act. In my view, Senator
Boxer and Senator Inhofe have done a lot of good, bipartisan work on
this legislation. Infrastructure is hugely important to our country. I
constantly say you cannot have a big-league quality of life with a
little-league infrastructure, and this legislation in particular has
some very important provisions that I and Senator Merkley have worked
on for our home State. It includes assistance to help build homes for
displaced Native American families, it provides funding to help restore
fish and wildlife habitat in our rivers, and it particularly includes
assistance for small ports in Oregon and across the country.
The fact is that small ports provide crucial access to commercial and
recreation fishing. They are home to ocean science and research
vessels. In our part of the world, they are the gateway to the global
economy.
Year after year, these ports have faced uncertain funding that
threatens good-paying jobs. I worked with other Members to make sure
the WRDA bill includes stable, permanent funding--over $100 million
annually--for small ports in Oregon and across the Nation.
I highlight this to say what this legislation does for a number of
crucial areas--to the economy and our quality of life. Senator Boxer
and Senator Inhofe have done very good work, but my big concern is
about the rider that was added on California drought, which threatens
the west coast fishing industry and has put every single good provision
in this legislation at risk.
Water issues have never been easy, and I want to compliment my
colleague from California for her hard and long work to get a deal on
drought that addresses California's serious and ongoing issues. Oregon
is no stranger to water challenges, but there has to be a
collaborative, stakeholder-driven process, and this rider is not a
product of the kind of compromise you get with a true collaborative
effort. In effect, an entire west coast industry feels left out of the
discussions. Fisheries and hard-working families in coastal communities
that depend on a healthy stock of salmon stand to lose the most, and
these stakeholders have told us they have had no meaningful seat at the
table.
The rider is not just about water and agriculture in California; it
threatens the health and sustainability of the salmon fishing industry
up and down the Pacific coast. The drought provision, in my view, also
threatens to undermine bedrock environmental laws, such as the
Endangered Species Act, and it certainly would create the prospect of
the new administration having power of its own volition to override
critical environmental protections.
I and my Pacific Northwest Senate colleagues have heard from
concerned west coast fishery groups and coastal businesses for days. My
constituents are concerned about the implication of pumping water out
of the Bay Delta to support a small number--a handful--of very large
agribusinesses in California. They believe that hard-working men and
women in the fishing industry and coastal businesses are going to pick
up the tab for this break for the large agribusinesses. That is not the
way to manage water in the West for the long term.
The water infrastructure bill, which is meant to provide support for
water-dependent communities, doesn't do a whole lot of good if there
are no fish in the ocean. If there are no fish in the ocean and no
fishing families or fishing boats in the ports and no fish at the
dinner table, the water infrastructure bill is going to be something
that we regret. I believe we will regret it in this form.
At a time when coastal communities need as much help as they can get,
this provision threatens to do the opposite. As long as the Water
Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act includes this California
drought rider, I think it would be a mistake to go forward.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Gardner). The Senator from Alaska is
recognized.
Remembering Mike Kelly
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, yesterday my State lost a great leader
in a tragic plane crash. Mike Kelly was a former State legislator from
Fairbanks. He was the patriarch of a wonderful interior Alaska family.
He leaves behind a long and accomplished legacy of public service,
leadership to his community, to the interior, and to our great State,
which he loved so much. He also leaves behind a wonderful wife,
siblings, and children who have also played and continue to play such
an important role in Alaska. He will be sorely missed by all of us.
Rest in peace, Mike.
Supporting Alaska's Law Enforcement Community and Honoring Sergeant
Allen Brandt
Mr. President, the holidays are nearly upon us. It is the time when
Christmas cheer descends on us, when hearts open and we reach out to
our neighbors, friends, and even strangers, particularly those who are
in need.
Today I want to reach out to the police force in Alaska. These men
and women put their lives on the line every day for us, and anyone who
has seen the news in these past few months knows it has been a
particularly difficult time for police officers all across the country,
who have faced unprecedented levels of violence--deliberate attacks.
Across our great Nation, our men and women who get up every morning
with the mission to protect us are having their lives taken. As of
December 5, there have been 134 fatalities against police officers this
year alone. That is up by more than 20 percent from last year. Let's
face it--they are being targeted. Some of them are even being ambushed.
Just a few minutes ago, right here on the floor, the Presiding
Officer gave some very eloquent remarks about what has happened in
Colorado. These kinds of acts are happening all across the country--
Iowa, Massachusetts, Texas, California, Colorado, Pennsylvania,
Georgia, and unfortunately more than once in recent weeks in my home
State of Alaska.
One brave Anchorage police officer, Arn Salao, was a victim of a
cowardly ambush in Alaska, but thankfully he survived. The incident
resulted in the arrest and the killing of an accused murderer who has
now been accused of killing five others in Anchorage.
Unfortunately, another officer involved in a shooting in Alaska--this
time in Fairbanks--wasn't so fortunate. On the morning of October 16,
Sergeant Allen Brandt, an 11-year veteran of the Fairbanks Police
Department, responded to reports of shots being fired. After pulling
his vehicle over to question a suspect, Sergeant Brandt was shot five
times. After being treated for several days, Sergeant Brandt was
expected to survive. He even came to testify in a remarkable act of
courage in front of the Fairbanks City Council on October 21. His
testimony was riveting, but in a devastating turn of events on October
28, just a few days later, Alaskans learned that Sergeant Brandt had
succumbed to the complications related to his injuries in recovery. The
hopes of our entire State were crushed upon hearing that this brave,
young public servant had passed away. Alaskans from every corner of our
State held vigils and continue to mourn his loss.
There was a memorial service in Fairbanks attended by thousands. I
happened to attend that with my fellow Alaskans. It was one of the most
moving services I have ever attended. At the memorial service, Sergeant
Brandt's testimony from just a few days earlier in front of the
Fairbanks City Council was played. There, he was speaking to all of us
on these important issues. It was so powerful and so moving to see this
young man so articulately speak about issues that don't just impact
Fairbanks, AK, or Alaska, but the whole country.
Sergeant Brandt left behind his wife Natasha and their four young
children under the age of 8.
I have talked about his testimony that he gave in Fairbanks that was
played at his memorial service, which
[[Page S6984]]
was so powerful. Only a few days earlier, he had been shot. He gave his
testimony, and then unfortunately he passed away. I wish to read
several excerpts from his testimony because I think it reflects not
only the importance of this issue, but it shows this young man speaking
on something that impacts the whole country.
Here is the testimony he gave at the Fairbanks City Council. There
was thunderous applause, of course, when he walked in--a man who had
been shot five times just a few days earlier. He stated:
I am humbled by the honor, and I'm no exception to the
rule. We have many fine officers that are far greater and
have done better things than I have. I do appreciate the
community's support and I know sometimes it's hard for
officers to see whether or not the city supports us, but I've
always said that by-and-large, the city does support its
police officers. And you know we're never going to have the
support of the criminals . . . and to tell you the truth,
they don't have my support either. However, I do support
their constitutional rights and their free exercise of them.
He continued:
I've seen the hand of the Lord in my situation. Can you
believe I was shot five times through the legs and I walked
into this room. There's a bullet, it's almost healed up, but
right here over my heart where my vest certainly saved my
life there.
I appreciate the support of the community, the Fairbanks
Police Department, the Anchorage Police Department, the
Alaska State Troopers, and other officers. But our officers
do a very hard job, and they need your support.
Unfortunately, when an officer gets shot or something bad
happens, it's just human nature--we don't think about things
that we need until something bad happens. I don't blame
anyone for that. But, you know, think about our officers.
I've worked for the city for 12 years, probably ten of those
years I worked weekends when my friends are off. I work at
night and sleep during the day. I don't sleep with my wife.
And the other officers, too. I was never called a racist
until I put the uniform on. You know, once you put a police
uniform on, you're a racist. I can't ever let my guard down,
not at Fred Myer and not at my house. I travel everywhere
armed. Always vigilant. Always watching. And the other
officers over there, they're the same way. So, we need your
support. Not just when bad things happen. But the officers
over there do a hard job. And most of the time it's
thankless. And we've really appreciated the outpouring of
support that's comes from this.
He concluded his testimony. He called out to one of his buddies:
I think Sergeant Barnett's here, and I want to thank him.
Sergeant Barnett was the first one on the scene, and until he
got that tourniquet on my leg, I didn't think I was going to
survive because I was bleeding a lot.
But let me leave you with this last story that he told his fellow
Fairbanksians: The night I was shot, I had my four kids and my wife on
my bed. I read them a story like I always do. After the story, I told
them, I think I am going to get shot tonight.
Can you imagine saying that to your kids? He continued: And it
happened. In the middle of the gun battle, that is all I could think
about.
He concluded by saying this: Can you imagine telling your kids before
you go to work that you are going to get shot? Well, that is what our
police officers deal with every day. I am not complaining, but I just
want you to know what it is like, the life of a police officer.
Then he looked at the audience and said: But we appreciate your
support.
That was his testimony. Only a few days later, he passed away. As I
read that testimony again, I am struck by Sergeant Brandt's
extraordinary selflessness. At the same time community members were
applauding his bravery, Sergeant Brandt sought to remind us of the
bravery of his brothers and sisters in blue, the unsung heroes who face
the same dangers he did but without public fanfare or an outpouring of
support.
Having met with first responders all over my great State, I know that
Sergeant Brandt's extraordinary selflessness is not an outlier, and it
is not an exception; it is a hallmark of our police force and the fire
department. They wake up each morning knowing that today may be the
last day they get their kids ready for school, the last day they kiss
their spouse goodbye. Today they may be asked to lay down their life to
save another. That is a heavy burden. It is a burden that is shared by
the spouses and children who have seen too many sleepless nights,
praying for the safety of their mom and dad.
In conclusion, over the holidays we are all going to come together
with family and friends to celebrate the holidays. We are going to
remember our troops overseas. But let's keep in mind the sacrifices
being made by our brave officers, as well as their families, who will
be on the beat during the holidays just like our members of the
military, protecting us.
On behalf of my fellow Alaskans, I want to express my profound
gratitude and thanks to our proud law enforcement community for all
they do to keep our communities safe.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
Mr. COONS. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about the continuing
resolution that is the business before the Senate. We are here once
again today, as we have too often been in the 6 years that I have
served here in the Senate, working at the last minute to avoid shutting
down our Federal Government later tonight.
As we have before, to avoid a shutdown we appear likely to pass yet
another continuing resolution. As an appropriator, as someone who is on
the committee that is responsible for putting together all the
provisions that will help keep this government moving forward, it is a
real disappointment to me that this continuing resolution fails to
address issues of real concern to folks all over this country.
Earlier this evening, I joined a number of my colleagues to draw
attention to coal miners and their widows and the concerns we have
about extending their health care through the adoption of the Miners
Protection Act. Although that is an issue that dozens of Senators are
concerned about, I wanted to speak tonight about another unacceptable
omission in this legislation.
This continuing resolution does not include a lesser known but, to
me, no less important provision, one that my senior Senator Tom Carper
and I have fought tirelessly for and one that is important to a
manufacturing company in my home State of Delaware and dozens of
companies in dozens of States. Last year, when Congress passed at the
end of the year the omnibus spending package, we left on the cutting
room floor, through an inadvertent staff error, provisions to extend a
series of clean energy tax incentives known as the 48C investment tax
credit, or ITC--not all of them, just for a few narrow and defined
areas and, in a case that I care most about, for fuel cells. Those
incentives have bipartisan support and have already proved successful
at creating new technologies and good manufacturing jobs in this
country.
We have heard a lot of talk in the last campaign about bearing in and
fighting hard to save manufacturing jobs here in the United States.
Well, extending the ITC is exactly the chance we had here today--we
have had in the past year--to do just that. There are tens of thousands
of jobs and hundreds, likely thousands, of companies across our country
that rely on this ITC. In my home State, Bloom Energy, a company that
manufactures in a number of States, has a significant presence. Built
on the site of a former Chrysler plant, it was taken down when Chrysler
closed its facility.
Bloom Energy offers real promise for the hundreds of Delawareans who
work there in a cutting-edge clean energy business that was growing.
But without the benefit of that section 48 investment tax credit, they
are not growing. They may even have to lay people off. In my home State
and in States all over this country, that is a concern I wish we had
worked together to address.
These are incentives that have been proven to bring good jobs to the
United States. If we don't extend section 48, as I think is very
unlikely to happen tonight, tens of thousands of jobs across our
country and dozens, at least in my home State, are at risk.
All over the country, we have heard in writing from hundreds of
companies in 48 different states that support this extension. These
companies want to invest in the research and development, the scaling
up of new clean energy technology. They require long-term certainty and
stability. But the extension of those credits has been pushed into next
year sometime, after a year in which it was promised over and over this
would get addressed.
The fault here lies predominately in the other Chamber, in the House,
which did not respond to requests from
[[Page S6985]]
the leadership of this Chamber for this to be addressed. Republicans in
the House are trying to push this issue, this extension, into a tax
reform package planned for next year. But tax reform has been on the
agenda here for year after year after year, and these credits expire
this year, December 31.
With countless jobs at stake across the country, punting this to next
year after a year in which it failed to be brought up and addressed has
real world implications in my State and States across the country. So,
after mistakenly, admittedly by error, dropping this extension a year
ago, leaders promised that this issue would be addressed. A year later,
it has not been. So on the stack of reasons why I will cast an
unprecedented no vote on the CR tonight, this is just one more reason--
a failure to fulfill a longstanding promise that these tax credits
would be extended.
Companies can't invest and grow if they can't have a predictable path
forward for investment and know about what is the possibility for their
incremental investment in R&D and manufacturing. Real American
businesses today, like Bloom Energy in my State and hundreds of others,
need this reliability. There is no reason this could not have gotten
done. There is no reason promises made could not have been kept. There
is no reason this could not have been resolved.
So with real disappointment and regret, I am going to vote no for the
first time on a continuing resolution that puts at risk keeping this
government open because of a whole series of missed opportunities in
this year's bill. It is my hope, it is my prayer, that next year, with
a new Congress and with a new President, we will renew an attempt to
find a bipartisan consensus around what it is we have to do to be
competitive as a country, to sustain an all-of-the-above energy
strategy, and to work together to find solutions that will grow
manufacturing in our country.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
Coal Industry
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, a number of my colleagues were down on
the floor a little bit ago, talking passionately about the challenges
our coal miners in the United States face. I want to mention Senator
Manchin from West Virginia, in particular, who is someone who speaks
with a lot of passion on this issue as was mentioned--so much so that I
cosponsored the bill that he has been advocating, largely on the basis
of his strong advocacy and, to be perfectly honest, the great respect I
have for Senator Manchin.
I do find it a bit ironic that what we have not heard from any of my
colleagues on the other side of the aisle, when talking about coal
miners' challenges, is that we have just had an 8-year war against the
coal industry and coal miners, waged by the President of the United
States Barack Obama, and all of his Federal agencies--8 years--
unprecedented, illegal from my perspective.
Where is the outrage? There have been a number of us who have been
trying to fight this war against coal miners for the last 8 years.
Where is the outrage about that? The war on coal is what has hurt many
of these miners. I am confident and hopeful that the incoming Trump
administration will help those miners with real jobs, not continue to
purposefully put them out of work as the Obama administration has done.
So when we talk about coal miners, taking care of them, we also need
to talk about who has been waging that war and who has been fighting
against it. That is what we really need to do to protect coal miners.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Minnesota.
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak for 10
minutes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, first I wish to associate myself with
Members who came to the floor this evening to talk about the CR. I will
be voting against it. This isn't about shutting the government down.
This is about the House putting forward a bill really without
consultation with Senate Democrats--there was some, but at first there
was none--and then leaving town. I feel that we could easily do a very
short-term CR to hash out a few of these matters--the health care for
miners and their widows being foremost in my mind. That easily could
have been done. It is not as if we worked in this body too many days
this year, and I think we could have worked next week to iron this out,
to hash this out. I will be voting no because if we really care about
the working people in this country, we really ought to be protecting
their pensions and their health care.
Remembering Captain Luis Montalvan
Mr. President, I rise today to honor a very special man and friend of
mine, CPT Luis Montalvan, one of my personal heroes.
On Monday I received the news that Luis had died last Friday. This
has been a difficult week, and I am grieving Luis's death. Luis
deserves to be honored because he dedicated his life to helping other
veterans cope with the same struggles he faced after returning from
war. I hope to do him justice because his story deserves to be told.
I met Luis in January of 2009 at an IAVA event--Iraq and Afghanistan
Veterans of America. Luis was there with Tuesday, his service dog. I
love dogs, and so I immediately went to Luis and to Tuesday. He told me
that he could not have been there if it weren't for Tuesday. I asked
him what Tuesday did for him. He told me he had severe PTSD, and he had
been an agoraphobic, which is why he couldn't have been there without
Tuesday. I asked him what Tuesday did for him. He said Tuesday could
anticipate when he was going to have a panic attack by the smell of his
perspiration or changes in his breathing pattern and that Tuesday would
nuzzle him, and he wouldn't have the panic attack.
Luis talked about how he had debilitating nightmares. If he started
thrashing in his bed, Tuesday would jump on the bed, wake him up, and
he wouldn't have to endure a debilitating nightmare.
He said he was agoraphobic, so he didn't go out. He got Tuesday as a
service dog. He had been drinking very heavily, alcoholically, and he
was offered this opportunity--this chance to have a service dog, to be
paired with this service dog. He was trained with Tuesday. Tuesday had
been trained a couple of years beforehand, including by a prisoner who
had been serving a sentence for second-degree murder and had been a big
part of Tuesday's training. That man was released from prison and now
trains dogs for a living. He has a business doing it.
He brought Tuesday back to his apartment in Brooklyn, a small
apartment that he couldn't leave. He said he learned something about
having a dog. You have to take a dog out at least twice a day. He
learned something else, which is that people don't go up to scruffy-
looking wounded vets--he walked with a cane because of part of his
wounds in Iraq--but they will go up to a scruffy-looking wounded vet
with a beautiful dog. Having Tuesday broke his isolation. He got out of
his apartment, into life, and starting attending Columbia University
School of Journalism.
I was so inspired by meeting Luis and Tuesday that, while I was
waiting for my election to the Senate to be resolved in 2009, which
took about 6 more months--I met him in January of 2009--I spent a lot
of that time during my recount and then the legal actions after that
researching service dogs and the benefits they bring to their owners.
When I got to the Senate, the first piece of legislation I introduced
was quickly passed into law. Johnny Isakson of Georgia was my lead
cosponsor. The bill was designed to increase the number of service dogs
for veterans. Luis inspired that.
In 2011, after graduating from journalism school, Luis turned his
story into a book entitled: ``Until Tuesday: A Wounded Warrior and the
Dog Who Saved Him,'' which chronicled his journey after returning from
Iraq. It was a very candid and deeply moving account of his struggle. I
have always admired the bravery it took for Luis to share his story. In
the year since the book came out, he had been traveling around the
country, sharing his story with lots of people, giving speeches and
interviews about his experience. He even had the chance to appear on
the David
[[Page S6986]]
Letterman Show with Tuesday. It was something I know Luis really
enjoyed.
Luis wrote two children's books about Tuesday. His book ``Tuesday
Takes Me There: The Healing Journey of a Veteran and his Service Dog''
is one of my grandson Joe's favorite books. Luis wrote these children's
books so kids could learn about how Tuesday changed his life and helped
him by helping him through his daily activities.
This year had been a difficult year for Luis. Despite Tuesday's
steadying presence, Luis was still feeling pain in his leg when he
walked. Sometimes that made it difficult to get around. To ease the
pain, he had his leg amputated a few months ago, and he was in an
intensive therapy program to relearn to walk with a prosthetic.
He had other physical difficulties though. I talked to Luis's parents
this week to call them and tell them how sorry I was for their profound
loss, and they told me that among other health difficulties, he was
suffering from very severe heart problems. So he was going through a
difficult period.
I wish to celebrate the legacy he leaves behind, his legacy of
helping veterans cope with life after combat. Because of Luis, more
veterans are now able to access service dogs.
Let me tell you something about these amazing dogs. Obviously, a
service dog can't do everything, but they do a lot to help. Service
dogs raise their master's sense of well-being. They help reduce
depression. They ward off panic attacks--as they did with Luis. They
assist when their owner needs help standing back up after falling. They
do so many things--and not just for veterans. They do it for diabetics.
They can smell when the blood sugar is too low. They can be companions
for autistic kids. The parents had told me that they could take their
child to the mall now because they won't act out because they are
taking care of their service dog while their service dog is taking care
of them.
For veterans living with service-related injuries, these dogs can
make a tremendous difference between veterans having a very good life--
a decent life--and a very difficult one. My bill was a step in the
direction to make sure that all veterans who need a service dog are
able to get one.
Still, we must realize that so many of our veterans still struggle
mightily, sometimes years and decades after they come home. The hard
truth is that in many ways we are family--our vets.
The VA estimates that upwards of 20 percent of veterans of Operation
Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan suffer from
PTSD. Twelve percent of gulf veterans and 30 percent of Vietnam
veterans have suffered PTSDs during their lifetime.
These statistics should serve as a sobering reminder of the pain that
so many veterans live with. It should remind us that unless you
yourself have seen combat--which I have not--there is really no way to
ever fully understand what they have gone through. I know I certainly
don't, but I do know that these men and women put themselves in harm's
way in service to our country, and it is our obligation to do
everything we can to help them when they come back.
As Members of Congress, it is our responsibility--more than anyone
else's in this country--to do right by them. I certainly do not have
all of the answers, but I do know we can do better.
Luis was my friend. He was a good man who loved his country and
wanted nothing more than to help ease the pain that so many of his
fellow veterans experienced. I don't have the words to describe the
sadness I feel knowing Luis is gone.
There is a lot to learn from Luis's book about what these men and
women endure when they come back from war, but learning about the
relationship between Luis and Tuesday is really one of my favorite
parts.
Here is one of my favorite passages. And remember that one of the
things Tuesday could do for Luis is anticipate panic attacks. Here is
the quote, and this is from his book.
Tuesday quietly crossed our apartment as I read a book and,
after a nudge against my arm, put his head on my lap. As
always, I immediately checked my mental state, trying to
assess what was wrong. I knew a change in my biorhythms had
brought Tuesday over, because he was always monitoring me,
but I couldn't figure out what it was. Breathing? Okay.
Pulse? Normal. Was I glazed or distracted? Was I lost in
Iraq? Was a dark period descending? I didn't think so, but I
knew something must be wrong, and I was starting to worry . .
. until I looked into Tuesday's eyes. They were staring at me
softly from under those big eyebrows, and there was nothing
in them but love.
Luis, I want you to know that while you are not with us anymore, I am
so proud of you. I am so proud that you were brave enough to serve your
country for 17 years, and then brave enough to share the story of the
hardship you faced afterward. I am so proud of you for giving hope to
other veterans who faced the same struggles you did. Your book sits on
my Senate desk still and always will. It will stay there as a reminder
of the man I am proud to have called my friend.
Thank you, Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Blackfeet Water Rights Settlement Bill
Mr. DAINES. Mr. President, today the Senate can make history in
Montana. The Senate has the opportunity to send the Blackfeet Water
Rights Settlement Act to the President for his signature with the
passage of this WRDA bill, an issue I have been working on since I
first came to Congress.
Modern efforts to settle the Blackfeet tribe's water rights date back
to 1979. After long negotiations and after being introduced four times
in the Congress since 2010, this year, the compact passed the Senate
for the very first time, and with the passage of this bill, it will
finally become law. The Blackfeet Tribe has waited long enough. It is
time to get this compact across the finish line, and we are very, very
close.
This compact will not only establish the tribe's water rights but
irrigation for neighboring farmlands. We call that area Montana's
Golden Triangle. It is some of the most productive farmland in our
State. In fact, it is where my great-great-grandmother homesteaded.
Today is a historic day for the Blackfeet Tribe, for Montana farmers,
and for Montana families. The Blackfeet water compact will update
decades-old infrastructure, and it will strengthen irrigation for
agriculture, while also protecting habitat.
I want to commend the Blackfeet Tribe and its chairman, Harry Barnes,
who have been diligent and patient in seeing this settlement forward. I
commend our State for its commitment to the Blackfeet Tribe and Indian
Country in Montana. I urge the support of my colleagues in passage of
this WRDA bill.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, today the Senate will vote to put the
government on autopilot for the next 4 and a half months. Coupled with
the continuing resolution we are currently under, that is 7 months of
fiscal year 2017 priorities funded--or not--under the terms of the
fiscal year 2016 omnibus bill. Freezing in place an earlier year's
priorities--ignoring the many hearings and the committee work and the
debates and the oversight that the Appropriations Committees have
invested in genuine, full-year funding bills for next year--by
definition means this stop-gap bill is chock-full of great mismatches
between our current priorities and those set long ago for an earlier
fiscal year. By definition it means wasted diversion of funds to past
priorities and giving short shrift to changing circumstances, needs and
priorities.
What does that mean to Vermonters? It means cuts to food assistance
needs. It means halted homeland security preparedness grants. It means
uncertainty for affordable housing developers and transportation
planners. It means we here in Congress didn't get our job done.
What makes the vote on this continuing resolution all the more
frustrating is the fact that we didn't need to be in this predicament
today. The Senate Appropriations Committee carefully considered 12
individual appropriations bills. All but one were reported with broad
if not unanimous support. Through September, October, and into
November, we negotiated in good faith and in a productive way with our
counterparts in the House of Representatives. That is until the order
came to stand down. The word was that the President-elect didn't want
us to pass a responsible, full-year budget. The word was that he wanted
Congress once again to kick the can
[[Page S6987]]
further down the road. Then Democrats in both the Senate and House were
shut out of the process--no consultation and no negotiations.
In the absence of what could have been an achievable omnibus
appropriations bill, this continuing resolution does fulfill a few key
priorities. It avoids a government shutdown, just before the holiday
season. It provides the millions of dollars authorized earlier this
week in the 21st Century Cures Act to fight opioid abuse and cancer. It
rejects the National Defense Authorization Act's proposal to increase
base defense spending through an increase in overseas contingency
operations funds. It provides billions of dollars in emergency disaster
assistance for recent natural disasters. It supports additional funds
to care for unaccompanied children from Central America and Mexico. And
at long last, it provides overdue funds--fully offset through the Water
Resources Development Act authorization--to address the shameful lead
contamination crisis in Flint, MI. The people of Flint have waited far
too long, while Congress has dragged its feet, to finally have access
to the needed resources for the children and families suffering there.
These are, surely, all reasons to support this continuing resolution.
But, as with most things, there is another side to this story.
The continuing resolution extends, without desperately needed
reforms, the EB-5 immigrant visa program. I opposed the current
continuing resolution for this same extension. As I have said numerous
times, the EB-5 program has become mired in fraud and abuse. Almost
everyone agrees it is broken. It is time we fix it. If EB-5 cannot be
reformed due to a paralysis of leadership, the time has come for it to
end, not be extended, without debate, in a continuing resolution.
This continuing resolution--again, negotiated behind closed doors by
Senate and House Republicans--does nothing to resolve the questions
about how to sustain health care for miners and miners' widows. The
Senate Finance Committee approved legislation in September to address
this crisis in a bipartisan vote of 18 to 8. The Republican leadership
has chosen--chosen--to not bring that legislation forward. Instead, now
mine workers will be forced to spend the last dollars in their
multiemployer health plan to cover this 4-month extension. What
promises do we have that there will be a real commitment to provide for
these men and women come next May? None. These mineworkers cannot
afford thousands of dollars in monthly health care bills on the small
pension payments they receive.
Further, the continuing resolution includes a troubling, precedent-
setting provision to expedite consideration of waiver legislation for
the President-elect's announced nominee to serve as Secretary of
Defense. The Framers of the Constitution provided that the Senate
should provide advice and consent in the appointment of such Cabinet
nominees. Congress subsequently sought to implement limitations on who
could serve as Secretary of Defense, thereby ensuring that America's
military would remain under civilian control. Circumventing these
limitations requires an act of Congress. It has been done just once
before and not with any deal of levity. This continuing resolution,
however, seeks to truncate the Senate's debate over granting, for only
the second time in history, such a waiver. My opposition to the
inclusion of this language stands apart from the nominee himself, as
well as the legislation granting such a waiver, each of which should be
debated fully. I oppose limiting the Senate's debate over the granting
of such a waiver. That is what this language does. The Senate is the
most deliberative body in the world. With this provision, we cede that
designation, at least a bit, and pave the way for further erosions.
Nonetheless, we face what is ironically both a complicated and
straightforward decision: allow for a government shutdown, 2 weeks
before the winter holidays, or approve this continuing resolution that
casts aside Congress's responsibility to enact meaningful
appropriations bills for the fiscal year. As the incoming vice chairman
of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I don't take this decision
lightly. I want the record to be clear. To Senate Republican leaders
and Republican leaders in the House; to the President-elect and the
Vice President-elect: Democrats will not rubberstamp a partisan agenda
in the 115th Congress. We will not tolerate being shut out of
negotiations about how our taxpayers' dollars are spent. And we will
not allow Congress to continue to buck its constitutional duties to
quite simply do its job.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I had hoped to offer two amendments to the
continuing resolution, CR, we are considering to fund government
operations through April 28, 2017. I want to say from the outset that I
am disappointed the Republican majority has decided to consider another
CR rather than pass full appropriations bills.
This is an abdication of our responsibility to govern, and there are
real negative effects for the American people. As vice chairman of the
Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, I can tell you that 4 more months
of a CR poses significant funding issues for the Department of Defense,
DOD.
Given the thousands of funding lines that make up the DOD budget and
the changing needs from one fiscal year to the next, it does not work
to simply continue spending from year to year. For example, rolling the
fiscal year 2016 DOD budget into fiscal year 2017 means that
procurement accounts are overfunded by $6 billion, while operations and
maintenance accounts--those primarily concerned with maintaining
military readiness--are underfunded by $12 billion. This is not the
support our men and women in uniform deserve.
To mitigate the worst of these effects, the bill before us contains a
very small number of changes to particular funding needs, so-called
anomalies. The two amendments I filed today suggest two more such
changes, to ensure that important DOD medical research efforts and
significant increases in spending for Israeli missile defense programs
move forward.
Just this summer, during the consideration of the fiscal year 2017
National Defense Authorization Act, the Senate voted in a strong,
bipartisan fashion to maintain a comprehensive DOD medical research
program. We debated at great length the important contributions DOD
medical research continues to make for our Active Duty personnel and
their families, as well as our military retirees, veterans, and the
American public.
Under a CR, because the bulk of DOD research dollars--over $1
billion--are added by Congress, much of this work will stop cold. No
new projects will be funded, with impacts on fiscal year 2016 research
projects as well. Passing this amendment will ensure that this critical
work and medical advances for our soldiers, airmen, sailors, and
marines are not delayed by allowing $1.8 billion contained in the
fiscal year 2017 Defense Appropriations bill to be spent.
At the same time, over the last decade, Congress has overwhelmingly
supported significant increases for Israeli missile defense programs,
including Iron Dome, David's Sling, and Arrow. The fiscal year 2017
Defense Appropriations bill includes a $113 million increase for these
programs--totaling $600.7 million--and this spending is necessary to
get new technologies into the field in a timely manner.
I think we can all agree that 7-month CRs are not the way we should
be funding our government. While we should be considering all of our
appropriations bills, passing both of these amendments would enable
important programs to maximize their impacts in fiscal year 2017.
Mr. PETERS. Mr. President, today I wish to speak, once again, about
how critically important it is to pass legislation that will finally
help the people of Flint repair their devastated drinking water system.
We have before us a water resources bill that was identified a long
time ago as the vehicle to assist Flint during their still-ongoing
water crisis. We have been working for months and months on this. We
have had strong commitments from leaders in both parties and on both
sides of the Hill.
The Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act, formerly
known as the WRDA bill, includes funding authorizations for communities
that have had a drinking water emergency, as well as language
authorizing increases in health funding and
[[Page S6988]]
lead exposure prevention. But the actual appropriations funding for
these provisions are contained in the Continuing Resolution.
The bottom line is this: For Flint and any other future communities
with drinking water emergencies to receive money, this body must pass
both the water resources bill and the continuing resolution. This may
be the last, best chance to secure the long-overdue assistance that the
people of Flint deserve.
The families in Flint have suffered through unspeakable hardships
over the last couple years. To this day, many are still using bottled
water to drink, cook, wash their dishes, and even take sponge baths.
After Thanksgiving, it broke my heart to see the famous ``Little Miss
Flint'' post on social media about how it took 144 bottles of water to
prepare Thanksgiving dinner.
Can you imagine having to open 144 bottles of water simply just to
cook your Thanksgiving meal? These same people have heard promise after
promise that they will get the help that they need to put new pipes in
the ground. Some of that work has started, and the water quality is
slowly starting to improve. Still, the fact remains that Flint
residents still cannot access clean drinking water directly from their
taps.
We shouldn't forget that the Flint provisions in the water resources
and the CR also contains language to set up nationally significant
programs and policies to help prevent and respond to any future
emergencies that are similar to the Flint water crisis. The bills
include money for a lead monitoring registry and an associated expert
advisory committee, as well as for a childhood lead prevention and a
better public notification process.
The water resources legislation also has nationally significant,
bipartisan provisions to restore some of our Nation's great bodies of
water, such as the Great Lakes, Everglades, Lake Tahoe, the Delaware
River Basin, and more. Not to mention this bill contains critical
projects for reducing the risk of flood damage, as well as maintaining
our navigational waterways and harbors. But I must recognize that this
bill is flawed and imperfect. I was very disappointed to see last-
minute changes to provisions that threatened the bill's strong,
bipartisan support.
The WRDA bill passed the Senate by a vote of 95-3 just a few months
ago, but these new changes to the text threaten to dismantle that
support. We must make tough decisions in Congress, and the vote on this
compromise bill will certainly be a hard choice for several of my
colleagues. But I would ask you think hard about the balance of this
bill and measure all the benefits of the many positive provisions. And
I would ask you to think about our responsibility to care for
communities in crisis.
We will soon have a chance to deliver on a long-standing promise for
some unbelievably resilient and strong people. I urge you to follow
through on that promise by voting in support of the water resources
bill and continuing resolution. Thank you.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Kansas.
Unanimous Consent Request--S. 290
Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, I wish to call to the attention of my
colleagues S. 290. S. 290 is a piece of legislation passed unanimously
by the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs. It is a bipartisan bill
that was crafted by the ranking member, the Senator from Connecticut,
Mr. Blumenthal, and me, and it deals with accountability at the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
This legislation has a number of components, but the one I wish to
focus on this evening is one that has a consequence to those in senior
executive positions at the Department of Veterans Affairs who commit
felonies in the scope of their employment at the Department of Veterans
Affairs. This legislation, S. 290, would eliminate their pension if
convicted of a felony in a court of law and only that portion of their
pension that was accrued after the conduct that resulted in the felony
conviction.
That is the circumstance that was approved by the Veterans' Affairs
Committee a year ago this month. That bill has yet to come to the
Senate floor. During that time in which we have been waiting for
consideration of this legislation, certain terribly unfortunate events
occurred at the VA hospital at Leavenworth, KS.
I have been on the Senate floor speaking to this issue previously,
but the basic facts are that a physician's assistant committed sexual
acts with his patients--veterans who came to the VA hospital at
Leavenworth, KS, for care and treatment, and we learned of this
reprehensible conduct from newspaper reports in 2015.
That conduct has affected many veterans in Kansas and in Missouri who
sought the care and treatment of a physician's assistant and who relied
upon the VA to provide that care for them. In fact, Mr. Wisner was
never discharged from the VA; he resigned a month after the conduct was
reported to the inspector general. Veterans have now sued Mr. Wisner in
court, and at least a dozen veterans are seeking redress, and criminal
proceedings are pending in the District Court of Leavenworth County,
KS, against Mr. Wisner.
One of the things the veterans who have called our office to talk
about this circumstance--and we believe there are many other veterans
who have suffered the consequence of this sexual abuse by a VA employee
who is a health care provider--one of the consequences has been phone
calls to our office asking for our help. One of the common
conversations is: It is so difficult for me to get my pension, my
benefits from the VA. Why would Mr. Wisner, if convicted of these
crimes, receive his?
So I have authored an amendment to S. 290 that would add an
additional category of Department of Veterans Affairs employees who
also would suffer the loss of their pension should they be convicted in
a court of law for conduct they committed in caring for patients at the
VA, and that reduction in pension would occur from the point of time of
the conduct that resulted in the felony conviction of that VA employee.
What we are talking about is adding positions such as physicians,
dentists, podiatrist, chiropractors, optometrists, registered nurses,
and physicians assistants to the language; the theory being if it is
appropriate to remove the pension benefits of a member of the upper
echelon--the executive team at the VA for conviction of felony
conduct--why would it not be appropriate to also add those who can do
even more damage to a veteran by felony conduct against them while
seeking care and comfort and treatment from the VA?
So what we now present to the Senate--in fact, we have asked for
unanimous consent on two previous occasions for this to be considered.
We have hotlined this legislation. It has cleared the Republican side
twice but has yet to clear the Democratic side of the Senate. So the
request soon will be that S. 290, as amended by a Moran amendment, the
language of which was negotiated between me and the ranking member,
Senator Blumenthal of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, be added to the
original S. 290, the bill that Senator Blumenthal and I created to
create accountability at the Department of Veterans Affairs.
Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the Committee on
Veterans' Affairs be discharged from further consideration of S. 290
and the Senate proceed to its immediate consideration; I further ask
that the Moran substitute amendment be agreed to; the bill, as amended,
be considered read a third time and passed, and the motion to
reconsider be considered made and laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
The Democratic leader.
Mr. REID. Reserving the right to object, we have to be back here in 2
hours anyway. I would ask my friend if he would be willing to come to
the floor at about 10 minutes to 10 again to renew his request. I have
a few calls I need to make to make sure the matter about which this
side has raised a concern is valid.
So if Senator Moran would be willing to come back in a couple of
hours, we can take a look at it.
Mr. MORAN. I appreciate the remarks of the distinguished leader, and
I am happy to accommodate.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection to the request?
Mr. MORAN. Mr. President, based upon the conversation and dialogue
that occurred with the Senator from Nevada, I withdraw my unanimous
consent request. I will renew my request
[[Page S6989]]
later and look forward to the majority leader being present at that
time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cruz). The request is withdrawn.
The Senator from Colorado.
United States Energy
Mr. GARDNER. Mr. President, over the past several years, we have
heard from our allies around the globe about the need for U.S. energy.
The fact that the United States can produce abundant and affordable
energy is the envy of the world, and allies from Eastern Europe to Asia
look at the United States as a place where they can achieve and get
that abundant, affordable energy supply they need to help grow their
economy so our allies aren't dependent on countries in the Middle East
that aren't necessarily friendly to them for their energy supply and
energy sources.
When it comes to energy production, we know across this country the
shale revolution has created hundreds of thousands of jobs. In my home
State of Colorado alone, it has created over 100,000 jobs. It is an
incredible opportunity that we have to gain North American energy
independence and security.
We also know we have an overabundance of natural gas supplies right
now. At the very same time that our allies are asking for American
energy supplies, we have an abundance of American energy. Especially in
the Rockies, we have the potential for an asset to become stranded--an
asset that we can produce a lot of but lack the markets to send it to.
As energy developments have occurred in the Northeastern part of the
United States, we have seen that Northeastern States are now able to
get their energy resources, natural gas, and others, from right in
their backyard instead of relying on the Western United States. Those
of us in the West have urged the construction of LNG terminals in the
gulf along the west coast so we can export that natural gas through LNG
terminals to our allies who desperately need it.
That not only gives our allies the energy they desire, but it also
makes sure we can continue producing energy in Colorado and the West
and not result in a stranded product that can no longer go east but has
an outlet to the west. Because of this demand by our allies and because
of the incredible success we have had producing that energy, the Jordan
Cove LNG terminal has been proposed for construction in Oregon. Jordan
Cove would provide an outlet for Colorado and other States' energy
productions to have an outlet to Asia.
I am chairman of the East Asia Subcommittee on Foreign Relations.
When I visited across and throughout the region, one of the key
conversations I have had with leaders, government leaders, and business
leaders in those nations is the conversation surrounding energy, and
they talk about what we can do to expedite and to increase energy
exports from the United States.
This Senate has made great progress, this Congress has made great
progress when it comes to exporting energy. In fact, earlier this year,
we allowed for the export of crude oil for the first time since Jimmy
Carter made it impossible decades ago. We also know we continued to
work on LNG Exports expediting the permanent approval process for LNG
terminals. Legislation that was included in the Energy bill would have
allowed those approvals, required those permits to be approved in an
expedited fashion. Unfortunately, the Energy bill did not get approved.
It does not look like it is going to move at the end of this Congress,
but I certainly hope it will next year, and I certainly hope we will
get language expediting LNG terminals.
One of the most clear outrages, though, of this administration's
policies over the last year--8 years has been its outright hostility to
energy development. Unfortunately, many of our commissions and agencies
in our government continue to reflect that hostility toward the
development of our energy resources.
Let's just take a decision that was announced mere hours ago as it
relates to Jordan Cove. Once again, FERC denied the application of
Jordan Cove to exports, shutting down their pipeline, preventing them
from getting the resources they need to open the facility to be able to
export to our allies in Asia.
They claim that Jordan Cove has not demonstrated a market. They don't
have enough of a market proven to approve the pipeline necessary to
feed the terminal to export to LNG. Jordan Cove has substantial
customer base in Asia. They have proven it to FERC. This is nothing but
the continuation of a denial in March that FERC made to shut down
exports of LNG, to shut down our ability to get energy out of the
Rockies and send it to our allies in the West.
Over the next several years, luckily we will be asked to confirm a
number of nominees from commissions and agencies across the government,
including FERC. It is my hope this body, as it looks to these
nominations and approvals, will start asking some very difficult
questions to those people who are going to be filling these commissions
about whether we are serious about energy production in the United
States and whether we are serious about allowing States such as
Colorado the ability to produce energy and then to export it to our
allies around the globe.
If people--like FERC right now--have their way, their answer is, no,
shut it down, keep it in the ground. That is extreme and an activist
point of view, and it is an outrage. It is denying the people of
Colorado economic opportunity. It is denying the people in the West
economic opportunity, and it is letting the government decide what is
right and wrong in the marketplace.
FERC, this government shouldn't be in the business of picking winners
and losers. Yet that is what it continues to do. Jordan Cove has
tremendous bipartisan support. Republicans and Democrats alike believe
that facility is important to Japan, that facility is important to
opportunities in Korea, that facility is important to our allies
throughout Asia, throughout the West, and it is my hope that as this
process moves forward, we can get a deep expression and understanding
from FERC about why they continue to deny these jobs, deny these
opportunities.
The demand is there. The need is there. The economics are there, and
we certainly need the jobs there in Colorado with the approval of this
pipeline and that facility at Jordan Cove.
I thank you for the time this evening, and I certainly hope we can at
least make some progress over the next few years with people in
agencies and people in commissions who believe in the American economy
instead of the American bureaucracy.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nevada.
Accomplishments Of The 114th Congress
Mr. HELLER. Mr. President, as we approach the end of this Congress, I
rise to discuss not only what we have accomplished in this Chamber but
also specifically what we have accomplished for the State of Nevada. I
am especially proud that many of my priorities have been able to move
forward to help Nevadans thrive--from veterans to health care, to
infrastructure.
These accomplishments prove that this majority was prepared to work
and produce lasting results. I look forward to advancing even more
priorities that benefit Nevada in the 115th Congress. As a member of
the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs, I have been proud to
advocate on behalf of Nevada's brave heroes. My focus has always been
on issues impacting Nevada's veterans most. I will give you some
examples: guaranteeing our veterans have access to care, ensuring they
receive care quickly, working to hire more VA doctors, providing health
care for rural veterans, and addressing the disability claims backlog
we have been working on for years.
In this Congress, there has been a lot of progress. As a cochair of
the Senate VA Backlog Working Group, I have been holding the VA's feet
to the fire on the disability claims backlog. The VA has adopted many
of the working group's policy recommendations, and this pressure has
helped reduce the backlogs from 405,000 claims in 2014 to 92,000 today.
Although, clearly, there is much more room for improvement, Nevada's
veterans are far better off submitting a claim to our Nevada VA
Regional Office today than they were 2 years ago. Nevada was once the
worst in the Nation and now it is in the top 25 percent for
performance.
Another issue plaguing veterans in Nevada and nationwide is VA doctor
[[Page S6990]]
shortages. It is hard for VA to recruit and retain medical
professionals, and that impacts how quickly our veterans can get their
care.
I have asked the Government Accountability Office to examine the VA's
current policies for recruitment and retention and report back to me on
what improvements can be made. I look forward to receiving that report
next year and enacting to ensure we address this issue that affects
urban areas, such as Las Vegas, and our rural veterans in Elko, Ely,
and Winnemucca.
When it comes to bringing high-quality care to Nevada, I am also
proud that the VA finally opened a brandnew VA clinic in Pahrump. While
there have been many positive steps forward for Nevada's veteran
community, clearly there is more to accomplish in the next Congress.
In fact, I am working to pass legislation through the Senate right
now that would bring greater accountability to the VA by reporting each
year on bonuses awarded to critical positions like VA hospital
directors.
We still have a 20-percent disability claims backlog and a growing
appeals backlog. The VA Choice Program must be revisited in 2017 for
reauthorization and improvements. The VA still struggles to fire
employees who are poorly performing. Rural veterans still struggle to
find doctors to serve in their area. These are priorities for Nevada's
veterans that I am committed to advancing every day that I am in the
U.S. Senate.
I am also particularly proud of the work we have done in the 114th
Congress on infrastructure. Those efforts yielded major results for the
State of Nevada. Last year, we enacted the first long-term highway bill
in nearly a decade called the Fixing Americans Surface Transportation
Act, or better known as the FAST Act.
This 5-year bill provides States with resources and the tools to
advance high-priority projects, such as the new Interstate 11
connecting Phoenix to Las Vegas, the Carson City freeway, and the
widening of the Las Vegas busiest freeway, Interstate 15 in Las Vegas.
The bill also included in my top infrastructure priorities the
expansion of Interstate 11 to Northern Nevada. I have been working for
years to improve mobility from Las Vegas to Reno. Surface
transportation projects like these spur economic development
opportunities. It reduces congestion and increases safety--the recipe
for creating short-term jobs and long-term economic growth.
In July, the FAA Extension, Safety, and Security Act was enacted into
law. This important legislation implemented important reforms that make
U.S. air travel safer, more efficient, essential to tourism
destinations, such as Las Vegas, Reno, and Lake Tahoe.
Again tonight, we will debate yet another important infrastructure
bill--the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation Act.
Included in that package is a bill I sponsored and have been working on
with my Nevada and California colleagues for nearly a decade--the Lake
Tahoe Restoration Act. This initiative will reduce wildfire threats,
jump-start transportation and infrastructure projects, combat evasive
species at Lake Tahoe, and ensure the jewel of the Sierras is preserved
for generations to come.
It also includes a provision I crafted with Senator Heinrich that
improves the water security of rural western communities. I hope my
colleagues will agree to quickly take up and pass this critical,
important legislation for my State, sending it to the President's desk
before the end of the year.
With a new majority in the Senate, we were also able to make good on
a number of promises to the American people on the health care front.
First and foremost was being able to be send an ObamaCare repeal bill
to the President's desk within the first year of our new majority. One
of my top priorities in our ObamaCare repeal efforts was to repeal the
40-percent excise tax on employee health benefits.
In Nevada, 1.3 million workers who have employer-sponsored health
insurance plans will be hit by the Cadillac tax. I knew the devastating
impact this tax would have on Nevadans, but I also knew that in order
to get anything done, we needed a bipartisan effort. My friend Senator
Heinrich from New Mexico and I teamed up to successfully include a
delay of the Cadillac tax in the omnibus bill at the end of last year.
Rest assured, I will continue to fight for a full repeal in the next
Congress.
This week, we were able to pass the 21st Century Cures Act, which has
a 2-year process to work in a bipartisan way to advance medical
research and clear out government redtape at the Food and Drug
Administration. I was very pleased two of my bills that focus on mental
health and protecting seniors' Medicare benefits were included in this
health care package.
First, my bill, Bringing Postpartum Depression Out of the Shadows
Act, was included in the mental health title of the bill. After working
with mental health care providers in my home State, I learned that
Nevadans lack access to the appropriate treatment, screenings, and
community support needed to provide effective care for new mothers
struggling with postpartum depression.
I worked with Senator Gillibrand and HELP Committee Chairman
Alexander on this important piece of legislation, which builds upon
existing State and local efforts by providing targeted Federal grants
to assist States in developing programs to better screen and treat
maternal depression.
Another bill we were able to pass as part of the Cures Act was my
legislation, the Medicare Advantage Coverage Transparency Act. This
legislation requires more transparency of the Medicare Advantage and
prescription drug benefits enjoyed by seniors throughout the State.
It will also ensure that these benefits continue to provide
meaningful coverage to seniors and will help us protect important
health care benefits for current and future retirees.
More than 30 percent of Nevada's seniors enjoy their Medicare
Advantage benefits, and enrollment continues to grow in my State.
Successfully passing a number of health care bills will surely set the
tone early next year when the united Republican government finally
repeals ObamaCare.
I am optimistic that with a willing partner in the White House, we
can build on these successes. I plan on using my role on the Senate
Finance Committee; Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Committee; and the Senate Committee on Veterans' Affairs to tackle the
challenges facing Nevadans across the State.
I know we will do everything in our power to protect our
constituents' access to care as we transition out of ObamaCare and into
a new era of a 21st century care system that works for patients.
I know we will honor our veterans by improving the quality of care
and benefits they have earned.
We will invest in roads, bridges, clean water, a modern and reliable
electricity grid, telecommunications, and other pressing domestic
infrastructure needs.
I look forward to working with my colleagues in the U.S. Senate on
these important priorities in the coming year.
I thank the Presiding Officer and yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SHELBY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Unanimous Consent Request--H.R. 3394
Mr. SHELBY. Mr. President, I will take just a few minutes. I rise to
call up for consideration H.R. 3394, the CAPTIVE Act. I have long
advocated for the Senate to pass the CAPTIVE Act, which passed the
House by unanimous consent in July.
In 2003, a group of Department of Defense contractors were on a
counternarcotics mission in Colombia when their plane crash-landed.
These Americans were captured by members of the Revolutionary Armed
Forces of Colombia, which we know as FARC, which is a violent guerrilla
group that is heavily involved in drug trafficking.
My fellow Alabamian Thomas J. Janis, the pilot of the plane,
tragically lost his life at the hands of these terrorists on February
13, 2003. The three
[[Page S6991]]
other Americans abroad the flight were kidnapped, held hostage, and
tortured for more than 5 years until they were finally rescued by the
Colombia military. These heroes are now seeking justice for themselves
and their families against those who carried out unthinkable acts of
violence.
The CAPTIVE Act is simple. It would make it easier for all U.S.
victims of terrorism to recover court-awarded damages. I believe that
the family of Tom Janis and all of the victims of terror deserve
nothing less than for the Senate to swiftly pass the CAPTIVE Act. I
urge my colleagues to join me in supporting that.
I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the immediate
consideration of H.R. 3394, which was received from the House; I
further ask that the bill be considered read a third time and passed
and the motion to reconsider be considered made and laid upon the
table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Ernst). Is there objection?
The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. BROWN. Madam President, reserving the right to object, I share
Senator Shelby's and other colleagues' strong desire to ensure that
this small group of Americans who suffered such violence at the hands
of FARC is compensated for their ordeal. Earlier this week, at the
behest of Senator Nelson and others, I met with some of those former
hostages. I heard of their suffering firsthand. I have read about it. I
have talked to them. I cannot imagine what they went through. While the
victims have already received a portion of the compensation awarded
them by Federal courts--around $16 million so far--out of a total of
$318 million awarded, they still have a long way to go.
The administration, including the Treasury Department, which overseas
our efforts to combat the narcotics trafficking that is having such a
devastating impact on our country and others around the world, has
expressed serious concerns that the CAPTIVE Act would undermine our
successful anti-narcotics efforts.
I want to help these victims. It is terrible what happened to them.
They were trying to serve our country--they were serving our country
when this happened. But I have serious concerns about this legislation
written in this way, how it would undermine successful anti-narcotics
efforts.
Since the administration's concerns and the risk to our anti-
narcotics efforts have not been addressed--and I think we can address
them, I hope early in January once we have coordinated and gotten this
information in a way to present it back to Congress in another piece of
legislation that preserves these anti-narcotics efforts and at the same
time fulfills our commitment to compensation. But because of all of
that, I must object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard.
Mr. SHELBY. Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MERKLEY. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
WRDA
Mr. MERKLEY. Madam President, I rise to share a few thoughts on the
Water Resources Development Act, or, as it is referred to, the WRDA
Act. This is a bill which has a tremendous number of water projects
across America that in general will work to make many communities'
economies work far better. These are widely distributed across the
country, and they are widely needed. It was worked out through a
tremendous amount of effort on the Senate side and on the House side.
There are certainly projects there I have fought for that will be of
assistance on the Columbia River and to the tribes who were affected by
the dams on the Columbia River and on the WIFIA, the Water
Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act--a vision I have been working
on for years to put in place.
All of that is very good, but I have real concerns about a provision
that was airdropped into the conference. This is not just a little one-
sentence rider; this is 90 pages called the California Drought Act.
Picture the big vision here. For years, the Central Valley of
California has been a massive consumer of water for agriculture. We
have had years of drought. During those years that the Central Valley
was a massive consumer of water, they planted a lot of crops that
consume a lot of water. Crops like almonds--it takes a gallon of water
for every almond. There are crops like rice, where you have to flood
the paddies of rice and there is massive loss to evaporation. But the
agricultural community there wants to continue growing the same crops
even throughout the drought, and so they are looking for ways to pull
more water out of the Northern California rivers and ship it to the
Central Valley.
Why is this a concern? This is a concern because these rivers in the
northern part of the State are key rivers for salmon. If you drain
these rivers to fulfill the water needs of the Central Valley, you will
do enormous harm to the salmon and to the salmon fishermen.
When salmon go downstream and head out to sea for 5 or 6 years, they
swim north. They have a huge impact and role to play off the Oregon
coast and off the Washington coast. That is why during the course of
this debate you have seen two Senators from Washington State, Maria
Cantwell and Patty Murray, talk about how concerned they are and why
you have seen my colleague from Oregon, Ron Wyden, talk about how
concerned he is--because we have at play here a battle between the
salmon fishermen and that industry and its iconic species and all it
provides to the Northwest and the agricultural growers of the Central
Valley.
It isn't as if the growers in the Central Valley haven't benefited
from taking water from north California--from the northern rivers; they
have been doing it for decades. They have been increasing the amount of
water for decades. Now they are asking to use this drought, through
this California drought bill, to give them authority to take even more
water despite a negative impact on the salmon.
That is why I am troubled, and there are some key provisions that I
thought are worth talking about specifically because some folks have
come to this floor and said: Don't worry, be happy. Nothing in here is
going to change the provisions and applications of the biological
opinions that control how we make sure we sustain a healthy environment
for the fish. Others have come and said: Don't worry, there is nothing
that changes the application of the Endangered Species Act. But
unfortunately that is just not accurate. I thought I would give some
insight into how this works.
Section 4001 in the bill provides an opportunity to bypass biological
opinions by setting up a pilot project and then studying the outcome of
the pilot project. It uses the pilot project as a way to do an end run
around the biological opinions and the Endangered Species Act.
Just to share a little bit of the language, quoting directly from the
bill, ``[T]he California Department of Water Resources . . . [will]
implement a pilot project to test and evaluate the ability to operate
the Delta cross-channel gates daily or as otherwise may be appropriate
to keep them open to the greatest extent practicable . . . and maximize
Central Valley Project and State Water Project pumping.''
Here is the thing. What you have is a river coming down, and salmon
that are coming back from the ocean swim up that river in order to
spawn. But along the way are these gates that control water that can
move into the delta toward the Central Valley. If those gates are
opened, the salmon, instead of going upstream to spawn, get diverted,
and it has a big impact on the species, so those gates are kept closed
in order to protect the success of the spawning salmon.
This basically says: Do a pilot project and open the gates. Then it
proceeds to say that what we will do about that is to collect data on
its impact. I will quote again:
[W]ith respect to the operation of the Delta cross-channel
gates described in (1), collect data on the impact of that
operation on . . . species listed as threatened or
endangered.
So it is a direct impact on the Endangered Species Act. It gives
permission through this so-called pilot project to
[[Page S6992]]
open the gates and then to collect data on how much harm it does to the
fish. That is very unlike the information that has been presented by
some on this floor.
Here is another provision within the 4001 section. It instructs
adoption of ``a 1:1 inflow to export ratio for the increment of
increased flow,'' and it gives a bunch of details about that, and it
says this must happen ``unless the Secretary of the Interior and
Secretary of Commerce determine in writing that a 1:1 inflow to export
ratio for that increment of increased flow will cause additional
adverse effects.''
It doesn't say you can do this 1:1 flow unless it causes adverse
effects; it says you can't do this 1:1 flow unless the Secretary of the
Interior and Secretary of Commerce say it will cause bad effects. So
essentially here is another end run around the biological opinion and
around the Endangered Species Act by just giving the Secretary of
Commerce and Secretary of the Interior of the incoming administration
the power to just let this water be diverted unless they act. That is
not something that can be challenged in court because there is no
standard being applied for violating the biological opinion, no
standard being applied for violating the Endangered Species Act, except
the opinion of the Secretary of the Interior and the opinion of the
Secretary of Commerce.
Those two things are in section 4001. Let's turn to section 4002.
Section 4002 says essentially there is a range at which a biological
opinion allows you to drain a river. When you normally think of water
being taken out of a river, you picture the river flowing down, and
maybe there is a place where some of that water is pulled out of the
river, but the rest of the river keeps flowing on down. But in this
case, the amount of water taken out is called a negative flow because
it actually ends the river. It pulls the water back. That is very
dramatic.
This bill has specific instructions, and in that range of
possibilities that might be considered within a biological opinion,
they are instructed to pump at the maximum rate, a rate that will not
be less negative ``than the most negative reverse flow''--I am reading
from this bill--``the most negative reverse flow rate prescribed by the
. . . biological opinion.''
So they are instructed specifically not to find the right space
within the judgment of the scientists and the biological opinion, but
if there has been an estimate--as it could be from here to here--to
take the very maximum rate, and this rate is so high that it causes
this negative flow of water, which is why they talk about rivers
running backward to feed water to the Central Valley.
So that is a precise instruction that changes the normal application
and work of scientists who are evaluating the effect, under all the
various conditions, of how much water to pull out, and so it very much
affects the biological opinion and very much affects the Endangered
Species Act.
There is a way that this can be overridden recent, but not by
challenging it in court--the only way it can be overridden is if the
Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary of Commerce shall document
in writing that it is going to go have a very bad impact. So, again,
this is giving no recourse to those who see enormous damage to the fish
because they have no power. All the power is given to the Secretary of
the Interior and the Secretary of Commerce.
Let's go to another section, 4003. The language itself essentially
says that the Central Valley projects and the State water projects
should take the absolute maximum flow rate that is allowed and then go
beyond that.
In section 4002, it was like: Here is the range. Take the top end of
the range. Don't use your scientific judgment about where you should
really be to protect the fish and the salmon industry. This one says:
Here is the range from here to here, but you have to go further, take
even more. This is almost unbelievable. I have never seen anything like
it.
I will quote: ``authorize the Central Valley Project and the State
Water Project, combined, to operate at levels that result in OMR flows
more negative than the most negative reverse flow rate prescribed by
the . . . biological opinion.''
So when some of my colleagues have come to this floor and said this
doesn't affect the biological opinion a bit, yes it does. It says it in
plain language. Here is the opinion; you have to be between here and
here. And the law, if passed, if adopted, says: No, no, no. Go further,
go beyond the range of the biological opinion.
This language is unambiguously inconsistent with the requirements of
the biological opinion. It just says in plain, straight language:
Ignore it. Go beyond it.
It also says that these transfers through delta water for the State
water project can occur even if they violate the 1992 Central Valley
Improvement Act--even if they violate it.
So what is in that section (a)(1)(H) of the Central Valley
Improvement Act that can be violated? I pulled up that language. Let's
just check this out. It refers to contractual obligations or fish and
wildlife obligations under this title.
So, in other words, this bill says you can ignore the obligations
related to fish and wildlife. So, once again, we see a provision aimed
at ignoring the impact upon fish or upon wildlife and authorizing the
raiding of water from Northern California for more almonds in the
Central Valley.
Now, 20,000 people work in the salmon industry, and a huge part of
this are the salmon that come out of these streams--streams that are
already compromised. So the reason there is such a profound objection
from Senator Boxer of California, from Senator Murray of Washington,
from Senator Cantwell of Washington, from Senator Wyden of Oregon, and
from me is that this is a blueprint for running over the top of
carefully crafted biological opinions designed to prevent the
extinction of key species. In this case, it is not just the extinction.
It is also a key commercial enterprise--the salmon industry.
So I am offended that this overrun of the salmon, this permission
slip to drain the rivers of the north to feed the Central Valley, is
being presented as having no impact on the biological opinions for the
Endangered Species Act. It is a full-fledged bulldozer running over the
top of the poor protections for the salmon.
This is a terrible precedent for Congress because each time an
industry is threatened, there will be those who will point to this
precedent and say: Look, when the almond farmers were threatened
because they didn't have enough water in the Central Valley, we gave
them permission to destroy the salmon. So when something else is
threatened, let's give permission to run over some other aspect of the
Endangered Species Act or some other aspect of the biological opinion.
This is an unacceptable precedent for anyone who cares about the
balance between our commerce and the diversity of species in our States
and other competing industries. This is not just almonds against the
survival of a species; it is almonds against 20,000 fishermen who
depend upon the salmon runs that will be so grievously impacted by this
bill.
So I encourage folks to read it. Read the fact that it lays out
specific instructions that require the maximizing of water beyond the
highest levels already existing within a biological opinion. This is
wrong.
I will be opposing closing debate on this bill because this air-
dropped provision did not go through the House side, and it did not go
through the Senate side. It sets a precedent that should be fully
debated in committee. The American people should have a chance to
respond and know about this air-dropped provision--an attack on the
Pacific salmon--before this Chamber votes on this bill.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The 114th Congress
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, the day after the election I said
that we had two main priorities for this postelection session of the
Senate: Pass the 21st Century Cures bill and fund the government.
[[Page S6993]]
We passed the Cures bill already, and we will be voting shortly to
keep the government running. Soon after that vote, we will pass the
bipartisan water resources bill, which directs assistance to families
in Flint and supports important waterways projects in nearly every one
of our States. It is testament to the hard work of so many and Chairman
Inhofe, in particular.
Under the leadership of Chairman McCain, this week we also passed the
Defense authorization conference report, which addresses many of the
national security challenges facing our country. I would also like to
point out that the Cures bill, which passed earlier this week, simply
would not have happened without Chairman Lamar Alexander. And it is
impossible to overlook the unending, unyielding work of Senator
Murkowski on the Energy bill, as well, or our indispensable Finance
Committee chairman, Senator Hatch, who has been involved in almost
every bill from the doc fix to the tax extenders that come through this
Chamber.
I would like to note the great work of the Appropriations Committee,
specifically for its efforts to ensure that individual bills and an
omnibus were prepared for consideration. We know they have been putting
in long hours, especially this week, and for that we are certainly
thankful.
This Congress, the Senate has passed nearly 300 bills, and nearly 200
of those are now law. But what really matters isn't the number of bills
passed; it is what we can achieve on behalf of the American people, and
by that standard, I am incredibly proud of what we have been able to
accomplish for our country.
Over the past week I have had the opportunity to pay tribute to many
colleagues who have made such a lasting impact on the Senate during
their tenure. But as the 114th Congress comes to a close, I would like
to take a moment to recognize another set of individuals whose work
makes the business of the Senate possible in the first place.
It goes without saying that keeping the Capitol running is a vast
undertaking. It requires a passion for service, round-the-clock work,
and great sacrifice by everyone employed. The legislative process
simply wouldn't be possible without the dedicated work of so many. On
behalf of the Senate, I would like to acknowledge their efforts and say
thank you to the following:
To my leadership team for their wise counsel; to our committee chairs
and ranking members for so much great work over the past 2 years; to
the many, many colleagues in both parties for working so hard to make
this Senate a success; and, to those we are saying farewell to--
Senators Coats, Boxer, Mikulski, Reid, Vitter, Kirk, and Ayotte--for
your service to our country, I say thank you.
To my chiefs of staff, Sharon Soderstrom and Brian McGuire, for their
indisputable talent and for leading a team that is second to none,
every member of which I would thank individually if I could, I say
thank you.
To the floor staff, Laura Dove and Gary Myrick and their teams, for
keeping the floor running, for running it smoothly, and for making it
look effortless every single time--even though we know it is anything
but; to the Parliamentarians and clerks who sit on the dais whenever
the Senate is in session, making sure our operations are smooth and by
the book; to the Secretary of the Senate and her team for protecting
the rich history of this body and for overseeing so many different
legislative and administrative operations, I say thank you to all of
these folks.
Off the Senate floor there are so many more to thank too: the Capitol
Police, for putting themselves in harm's way to protect everyone who
works in or visits this institution; the Sergeant at Arms staff for
overseeing a dizzying range of efforts--from setting up rooms and
enacting security protocols to preparing for next year's inauguration;
the Architect of the Capitol staff, which is always hard at work making
the Capitol the best it can be--from the conservation of these
illustrious hallways to the extensive restoration of the Capitol dome;
and to literally countless others: the doorkeepers, the legal counsels,
the committees and their staff, the pages, and all those whom I have
not mentioned, we appreciate what you do. Please know that your service
and your dedication does not go unnoticed.
Let me also again recognize the Democratic leader for his more than
three decades of service. As I said yesterday, Harry and I clearly have
had some different views on many things throughout the years, but we
have shared similar responsibilities as the leaders of our respective
parties, and I think we can both agree that none of this would have
been possible without the support of our staff. I want to recognize
Harry's team, past and present, and thank them for many years of
partnership with my office.
We now turn the page on one Congress and get ready to write a new
story in a different one.
I am proud of the work this Republican-led Senate has done the past 2
years. My colleagues should be proud of their work as well. It has been
incredible to see what we have been able to achieve already. We know
our work doesn't end here, though, and I know each of us is eager to
get started in the 115th Congress. For now, I want to thank my
colleagues for a productive Congress, and I want to wish each of you a
happy holiday season and a happy New Year.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
Ms. MIKULSKI. Madam President, I rise for a final time as the vice
chair of the Appropriations Committee. Tonight, as we get ready to
vote, these will be the last votes I will cast in the U.S. Senate. The
ones we do today and possibly tomorrow will write my final chapter as a
voting Member of the U.S. Senate.
I am very proud to be the first woman and the first Marylander to
chair the Appropriations Committee. I am going to thank my fellow
members of the Appropriations Committee and especially Chairman
Cochran, who has been my friend and ally on moving these bills forward.
I wish to also express a special thanks to my colleague and partner
on the Commerce-Justice Subcommittee, Chairman Richard Shelby, for his
steadfast advocacy for the important needs facing this country.
The Appropriations Committee is a problem-solving committee. Our
markups are vigorous and rigorous, but at the end of the day, we do try
to find compromise without capitulating on our principles. That is why
I wish I was standing here today presenting the Senate with a full-year
funding bill instead of a temporary bill through April 28.
Throughout the year, I have come to the floor seeking additional
funding for fighting heroin and opioid abuse, helping the people of
Flint, MI, and also dealing with the Zika response treatment. I am
happy to report to my colleagues the Zika bill did pass in September,
and this continuing resolution would have done all three.
This bill includes important needs for our country. First of all, it
meets our national security needs. There is funding in here for our
troops overseas and money to enhance humanitarian relief and also very
crucial needs related to embassy security. There are also other needs
facing the people, and this goes to the disaster relief for victims of
floods and Hurricane Matthew. While we are looking at the disasters of
floods and hurricanes, there is also help for Flint, MI--$170 million,
subject to authorization.
We also looked at the other challenges facing our communities. One of
the things we see is the big challenge of opioid abuse. I have heard it
in my State and from my Republican Governor. I know the Presiding
Officer has heard it in the great State of Iowa, and this terrible
scourge and challenge knows no party, nor any geography, and we have an
important downpayment in fighting that with $500 million.
Also in the Cures Act, there is money to deal with the dreaded ``c''
word, cancer. With the advocacy of the Vice President and again working
across the aisle and across the dome, we have come up with something
called the Cancer Moonshot. In other words, if we could send someone to
the Moon and return them safely, as our beloved John Glenn pioneered,
then we can also have a Moonshot to find a cure for cancer. I am so
pleased that as we wrap up our time here that that is there, although I
am disappointed the funding for Flint is subject to authorization in
the Water Resources Development Act
[[Page S6994]]
and that the extension of the miners' health benefit lasts only through
April 30. I believe promises made should be promises kept, and the
miners deserve permanent extension of these benefits. I also support
Senator Manchin's efforts on his behalf.
I am disappointed our Republican colleagues wrote the CR behind
closed doors and that we began to have to fight between coal miners
versus Flint, MI, and others, pitting one group against another. I hope
we can have a different approach in the next Congress. I will not be
here, but I am here now as we try to finish this work.
We hear a lot of Washington words, words that people don't
understand--CR, stopgap, shutdown. I want to talk about what
appropriations are, not in the technical bills but saying that we fund
government doesn't mean anything. It means that we tried to find
solutions, we tried to make sure we stood up for national security,
that we promoted economic growth, and that we met compelling human
needs and invested in what we as a nation value.
This appropriations bill does pay for our troops in the field and the
people back home to make sure they have the equipment and supplies they
need to do their job. It also supports diplomacy, our Foreign Service
Officers, and also our foreign aid to make sure we meet compelling
human needs in our own country and around the world.
It does fund the Homeland Security, while at the same time looking
out for our Coast Guard, clearing the ice and keeping our ports open.
It is the FBI, and here we make a downpayment on the new, much needed
FBI facility to meet the new changes they have--fighting domestic
terrorism and cyber security.
We all want to put people back to work. That is why the
Appropriations Committee does make investments in transportation
because we know transportation not only moves goods and cargo, but it
provides good jobs today: airports, seaports, roads, bridges, transit,
and rail.
To develop new ideas, we need to continue to lead the way. That is
why we have made major efforts in innovation: in energy, agriculture,
weather, climate, and astronomy. I am not going to sound like an
accountant. I am ready to give an accounting to the people of Maryland,
to this Nation about how we are spending their money. We want to spend
the money to give the people of Flint safe drinking water, give people
treatment to kick their prescription drug habit, to find cures for
disease from cancer, Alzheimer's, and I am proud of the resources we
provide to make our communities better and safer.
I am proud of my service as the Democratic leader of the
Appropriations Committee. I am proud to have worked with my colleagues.
I have the best subcommittee chairs or rankings that anyone could have.
We have an excellent staff, and we have all tried to work together.
Today, as I bring this bill--the continuing resolution before the
Senate--I say to you, I ask you to vote for the continuing resolution.
It has parity for defense and nondefense. It doesn't have poison pill
riders, and it has additional money for Flint, heroin, and opioid
abuse. This continuing resolution accomplishes the goals we set out for
this year. I am sorry that it only funds the government to April.
This is my last set of votes. I hope you vote for the continuing
resolution, and I hope in March, with the good work of Senator Leahy,
who will then be the Democratic vice chair of the Appropriations
Committee, working with Senator Cochran, who is so able and so skilled
and yet such a man of principle, you will be able to arrive at a full-
year funding for the Appropriations Committee.
I do hope in the next Congress we do return to regular order. This
committee is capable of it if the Senate is capable of it. In other
battles, I have always said to my colleagues, and you know this when I
have said to the women of the Senate: Let's put our lipstick on, square
our shoulders, and get out there and fight.
As we get here to vote on this continuing resolution, my final sets
of votes, I want the people of Maryland to know and the people of
America to know, I have my lipstick on, my shoulders are squared, and I
am ready to get out there and vote, and although this will be my last
fight in the U.S. Senate, it will not be my last fight to help America
be the great country it is.
God bless you, God bless this honorable body, and God bless the
United States of America.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
(Applause, Senators rising.)
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the
mandatory quorum be waived.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. McCONNELL. I yield back time on our side.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, the time is yielded back.
Cloture Motion
Pursuant to rule XXII, the Chair lays before the Senate the pending
cloture motion, which the clerk will state.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
do hereby move to bring to a close debate on the motion to
concur in the House amendment to the Senate amendment to
Calendar No. 96, H.R. 2028, an act making appropriations for
energy and water development and related agencies for the
fiscal year ending September 30, 2016, and for other
purposes.
Mitch McConnell, Roger F. Wicker, Orrin G. Hatch, Johnny
Isakson, John Cornyn, Thad Cochran, Mike Crapo, Pat
Roberts, Bill Cassidy, John Hoeven, John Barrasso, Thom
Tillis, John Boozman, John Thune, Daniel Coats, Marco
Rubio, Roy Blunt.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, the mandatory quorum
call has been waived.
The question is, Is it the sense of the Senate that debate on the
motion to concur in the House amendment to the Senate amendment to H.R.
2028 shall be brought to a close?
The yeas and nays are mandatory under the rule.
The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk called the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator
from Arkansas (Mr. Cotton).
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Rubio). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 61, nays 38, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 160 Leg.]
YEAS--61
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Barrasso
Bennet
Blunt
Boozman
Burr
Cardin
Cassidy
Coats
Cochran
Collins
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
Daines
Donnelly
Enzi
Ernst
Feinstein
Fischer
Flake
Gardner
Grassley
Hatch
Heinrich
Hoeven
Inhofe
Isakson
Johnson
King
Kirk
Leahy
McConnell
Mikulski
Moran
Murkowski
Murray
Nelson
Perdue
Peters
Reed
Risch
Roberts
Rounds
Rubio
Scott
Sessions
Shaheen
Shelby
Stabenow
Sullivan
Tester
Thune
Tillis
Toomey
Udall
Vitter
Whitehouse
Wicker
NAYS--38
Blumenthal
Booker
Boxer
Brown
Cantwell
Capito
Carper
Casey
Coons
Cruz
Durbin
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Heitkamp
Heller
Hirono
Kaine
Klobuchar
Lankford
Lee
Manchin
Markey
McCain
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Murphy
Paul
Portman
Reid
Sanders
Sasse
Schatz
Schumer
Warner
Warren
Wyden
NOT VOTING--1
Cotton
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 61, the nays are
38.
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn having voted in
the affirmative, the motion is agreed to.
Cloture having been invoked, the motion to refer falls.
Under the previous order, all postcloture time has expired.
Motion to Concur With Amendment No. 5139 Withdrawn
Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to withdraw the
motion to concur with further amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. McCONNELL. I ask unanimous consent that there now be 2 minutes of
debate equally divided before a vote on adoption.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
[[Page S6995]]
Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Arizona.
Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, what we are doing here is we are cutting
defense spending, we are increasing nondefense spending, and we are
locking in the legitimacy of the nondefense spending according to the
Budget Control Act. So what we are doing by passing a continuing
resolution is putting in sequestration again, while even reducing
defense spending.
In the words of the four uniformed chiefs of our military, you are--
and I quote them directly--``putting the lives of the men and women
serving this Nation in uniform at greater risk''--at greater risk. You
are putting the lives of the men and women who are serving in the
military at greater risk because we want to get out of here for
Christmas. Shame on you.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
Order of Business
Mr. McCONNELL. For tonight's schedule, we hope to have the WRDA vote
around midnight, and we will seek to get a limited time agreement
during the vote that is about to occur.
Vote on Motion to Concur
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there further debate?
If not, the question is on agreeing to the motion to concur in the
House amendment to the Senate amendment to H.R. 2028.
Mr. McCAIN. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There is a sufficient second.
The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. CORNYN. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator
from Arkansas (Mr. Cotton).
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Fischer). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 63, nays 36, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 161 Leg.]
YEAS--63
Alexander
Ayotte
Baldwin
Barrasso
Bennet
Blumenthal
Blunt
Boozman
Burr
Cantwell
Capito
Cardin
Cassidy
Coats
Cochran
Collins
Cornyn
Daines
Donnelly
Enzi
Ernst
Feinstein
Fischer
Gardner
Grassley
Hatch
Heinrich
Hoeven
Inhofe
Isakson
Johnson
Kaine
King
Kirk
Klobuchar
Markey
McConnell
Mikulski
Moran
Murkowski
Murphy
Murray
Nelson
Peters
Portman
Reed
Roberts
Rounds
Rubio
Scott
Sessions
Shaheen
Shelby
Stabenow
Sullivan
Tester
Thune
Tillis
Toomey
Udall
Vitter
Whitehouse
Wicker
NAYS--36
Booker
Boxer
Brown
Carper
Casey
Coons
Corker
Crapo
Cruz
Durbin
Flake
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Heitkamp
Heller
Hirono
Lankford
Leahy
Lee
Manchin
McCain
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Paul
Perdue
Reid
Risch
Sanders
Sasse
Schatz
Schumer
Warner
Warren
Wyden
NOT VOTING--1
Cotton
The motion was agreed to.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.
____________________